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"YeeMarvin K. Bloom, executive di-
VoL, XVIII—No.
1
OCT. 19, 1957
Eastern Edition 20¢
—_—. .
as their mascot in the unit
two fairly warm prospects
turned up before the week
it and the hunters were fol-
Flowing all leads in the that
one would wind up in their hands.
THE PAGE ONE announcement
Army. Times last week, outlin-
ing the problem, was responsible
for most of the bush-beating that
went on this week: “But some
valuable advice was gained from
experts on wooden Indians and
their natural habitat, the American
cigar store.
rector of the Tobacco Merchants
Assn, of the U.S., warned that the
wooden Indian was as scarce as
the buffalo and probably twice as
valuable. But he suggested sever-
al sources where they might be
found, as well as suggesting that
ads be placed in a number of to-
bacco trade papers. The Cigar
Institute of America concurred in
his opinion.
This information was. passed on
to Lt. Eugene Donnelly of the 2d
ABG, whe initiated the-méécot re-
quest and presumably -is follow-
ing up along the limes: suggested.
* * *
THEN. came word from MSgt.
Rappend C. Crowley of Fort Ben-
ning, Ga. Years ago, he said, a
wooden Indian stood in front of
what is mow the Wallace Book
Store on Seneca Si., Oil City, Pa.
This was two doors south of the
Arlington Hotel. Might be still
there.
Might also be a member of the
Seneca tribe, not an Apache —
if that mattered.
Considering that in this case it
didn’t, Army Times wired the Oil
City chamber of commerce, ex-
plained the situation and asked
what could be done. By press
time, no word from Oil City.
edn Edward F. Towles then
up from Fort Myer, just
Potomac (named for
fre tomacks, an Indian tribe)
Washington.
Ry Clarksville, Tenn., just
@ war, he remembered
cting from a cigar store
an old, dusty Indian and
~~ see him for the
ellow with @ German
might have been Hofstetter.
went wire to Lt. Don-
qué poring that if he had
he 101st Airborne
0 Campbet Ky., they might
ttle investigating in near-
ksville,
t'e where things now stand,
i! developments in this
@ Chase next week...
% minute, folks!
1@ just turned up:
Here’s a
es!
“Vediunite anyone pee
where Indians can be f
please rt in touch with: Editor
imes, 2020 M St., NW,
A Work-Travel Plan
If you are one of the many Army wives who would like to add to
the family income but hesitate to take a job because you are always
on the move, the work-travel plan devised by Manpower, Inc., is for
you,
Through this plan a service wife may accompany her husband
on his assignments and work as many hours as she likes without
the. incumbrances and obligations of a permanent job.
She takes
qualification tests and is then certified for work in more than 100
cities in the States, plus seven foreign countries.
current wage rates in each locality.
For details about this plan,
column on page 31.
Pay is based on
read the Date Line Washington
New Uniform
Date Delayed
WASHINGTON.—The Army has
again delayed the date on which
officers must own or wear Army
Green.or Army Blue uniforms.
Because of the “contemplated
release of officers from active duty
early in calender year 1958, the
date on which all officers and war-
rant officers in the active Army
will be required to own and wear
Army Green and Army Blue uni-
forms is under study in the Depart-
ment of the Army,” says DA mes-
sage 577556, of 11 Oct.
“While a date has not yet been
determined,” the message says, “it
is not anticipated that officers and
warrant officers in the active Army
will be required to own or wear
either the Army Green or Army
Biue uniform prior to 1-Jan. 1958.
Action on (DA Message 555219, 3
Aug.) which established 1 Nov.
1957 as the mandatory date for
ownership and wear of the Army
Green and Army Blue uniforms is
hereby suspended.”
Officials said that another mes-
sage would be sent to the field be-
fore January 1 in which the man-
datory date for wear and owner-
ship of the Army Green and Army
Blue uniforms will be set.
Until this message is sent out,
Army Green and the officers’ olive
drab uniform (pinks and greens)
are both authorized for duty and
off-duty wear, including wear in
formation with troops, during the
winter uniform season.
The message points out thdt re-
maining in effect is a March 5,
1957, message in which officers
serving in areas where the winter
uniform is required throughout
the year were exempted from hav-
ing to have the new uniforms
(Army Greens and Army Blues) if
they were scheduled for separation
or release from active duty before
May 1, 1958.
RIF Pay
Delay Is
Offered
WASHINGTON—Hard-pressed to
meet spending targets set for it by
the Defense Department, the Army
will shortly begin to hold up read-
justment pay to men who are will-
ing to wait for a few gveeks or
months to get it.
A message putting this policy,
which has already received the
blessings of the Treasury. Depart-
ment, into effect is expected to go
out momentarily. Holding it up as
this is written is a Defense Depart-
ment look-see which may result in
its becoming a Defense memoran-
dum applicable to all services in-
stead of an Army-only action.
Either way, this step could be a
windfall for involuntarily released
Reservists who will be relieved of
the big tax bite in readjustment
pay that they are now faced with.
There will be no problem in col-
lecting readjustment pay under the
program. Men who are going to
try to make out as civilians and
want money to invest in a business
—or for any other reason includ-
ing just to have the money—won't
be denied readjustment pay.
But those who stay in the Army
or who have funds enough in their
savings, their accrued leave and
travel payments to be able to hold
off until after the first of the year,
could do well by not demanding the
money now.
Incidentally, it now looks as if
50 percent or more of the officers
and warrant officers going out in-
(See RIF, Page 10)
Like the A-Bomb Project
New Missile Plan Offered
WASHINGTON — Army Times
learned this week that the Army is
willing to go along with an inter-
service missile development pro-
Se to the Manhattan
ject which developed the atom
bomb—after having rejected the
ae ors four times during the past
‘our years.
Army leaders explained that the
Army has opposed creation of a
Manhattan Project-typ¢ missile
program because of the fear it
would be dominated by the Air
Force,
The Army now would support a
coordinated missiles development
program, thig paper learne ro-
vided all research and develop-
ment, testing and talent would be
put y under Defense Dept.
control. And unlike the Manhattan
Project, the Army feels, the new
missile agency should have no
Wash
ington 6, DC.
production facilities of its own.
Experts Say Army
Can Shoot the Moon
WASHINGTON. — Insiders
here say the Army can put a
three-pound. payload on the
moon within a week to six
months, using existing hard-
ware,
On a crash basis, Army rocket
experts say privately, within a
year the Army. could shoot a
payload te the moon which
would burn so brightly it could
be seen by the naked eye, These
game experts fear the Russians
may do this first, perhaps on
Nov, 7, anniversary of the Com-
munist Revolution.
This concession came in the
wake of a charge by Sen. Henry
Jackson (D., Wash.) that the Bu-
reau of the Budget refused to
release $8-million two years ago
for the development of nuclear
propulsion for rockets, Jackson,
chairman of the Military Applica-
tions subcommittee of the Congres-
sional Joint Committee on atomic
Energy, made his charge in the
release of a series of recommen-
dations which he says would have
boosted the American missile pro-
gram,
The recommendations were made
by Jackson and Sen, Clinton P.
Anderson (D., N. Mex.) in June,
1955. They were aimed at speeding
work on the intercontinental guided
missile (ICBM).
+ * *
THESE NEW LOOKS at Amer-
ica’s missile programs resulted
from Russia’s Sputnik, the 184
pound earth satellite thrown into
the air despite official U.S. con-
(See NEW, Page 18)
° i~
et0N ASN
SLY r we '
WASHINGTON—A virtual
freeze on enlisted promotions
in the top two grades for the
rest of this calendar year was
revealed by the Army this
week in announcing quotas for
the secorid quarter of Fiscal
Year 1958.
This suspension of top-grade pro-
motions was somewhat offset by
a routine number of promotions
being authorized to E-5 and a big
increase in E-4 authorizations over
the numbers permitted in the per-
iod just past or even the one be-
fore that.
Continued by the promotion
quota messages sent by the Army
to major commands were promo-
tion to E-3 after eight months total
service for qualified men, if ap-
proved by their COs, and a freeze
on promotions to top grades in a
number of occupational fields.
However, there were a number
of changes in the MOS fréeze list.
They are detailed below.
- * o
HERE’S HOW the promotion
quotas add up and how they com;
pare to those put out in July:
October July Change
E-7 101 158 -657
E-6 153 2,740 -1,618
K-5 6,701 8,314 -1,613
E-4 45,166 30,297 -+-14,869
In the top two grades, only token
promotions are being made. These
were squeezed in so that the Arm
could say that the current 100,006.
man reduction has not resulted in
a promotion freeze.
The change in promotions to E-5
is about normal for this time of
year. The increase in the number
of promotions to E-4 reflects the
(See TOP, Page 18)
New Jobs
In Store
For Vets
WASHINGTON.—The activities
of the Army Veterinary Corps are
being drastically cut back under
a memorandum approved by for-
mer Defense Secretary Charles E,
Wilson shortly before he retired
from that office.
The Wilson memorandum ap-
proves one sent by Army Secretary
Wilber Brucker to him in Decem-
ber last year which the following
steps are to be taken:
1, All inspection and grading of
meats and other food from animal
sources is to be done by the De-
partment of Agriculture for items
originating in the United States,
Puerto Rico and Hawail.
2. The Department of Agricul-
ture is to take over all research
into food-borne and animal dis-
eases,
8. Medical care for public ani-
(See VETS, Page 18)
Army to Promote
Few Officers Soon
WASHINGTON — Token promo-
tions for officers before the end of
the month now appear likely.
Officials who will discuss the sub-
ject say that only officers going to
the grades of colonel, lieutenant
colonel and major from existing
lists recommended for temporary
promotion will be affected. No pro-
motions to captain are likely.
Numbers to be made will be no
more than 100 roughly in all
grades. If made, promotions are
likely from October 25 on.
YA HIS HOVE
SIWHOSLN Od YA
ARY Og ht
2 ARMY TIMES
OCTOBER “19, 1957
Jupiter vs. Thor
Tests to Continue
WASHINGTON.—The Army-developed Jupiter Inter-
mediate Range Ballistic Missile has won a new lease on life.
Defense Secretary Neil H. Mc-
Elroy announced last week that the
competitive testing of Jupiter and
the Air Force-developed Thor
IRBM would continue “until a bet-
ter technical basis is established
for an IRBM program decision.”
Until a month ago, it had been
freely predicted that Thor would
be the missile chosen. It was said
that the study being made by the
three-man special committee to
select the better of the two missiles
was a “face-saving” formality for
the Army and would provide no
more than a justification for pick-
ing the Air Force missile.
This is no longer true.
A Defense spokesman said that
the Defense Department would
“find the money somewhere” to
continue. the Jupiter test and
development program. Since July
1, the Jupiter program has been
financed out of Defense funds, not
Army money. Enough cash was set
aside to permit the program to
continue through December 31.
Now it appears that the program
may continue well beyond that
date.
The spokesman said that if neces-
sary, there would be money in the
FY 1959 budget, now being pre-
pared, to continue the Jupiter re-
search and development effort.
It was exp’ained that not enough
facts have been developed with the
firing of five or six Thor missiles,
and eight or 10 Jupiter missiles to
permit a finding on which is more
reliable.
Of the five Thor firings, only the
fourth seems to have resulted in
a long-range flight. Of the eight
Jupiter firings, the first two were
failures because of valve trouble
This has been overcome and the
following firings all appear to have
been successful.
* + -
BEFORE THE DECISION to con
tinue the test program, the three
man special committee met almost
continuously after late August. On
the committee were William M
Holaday, special assistant to the
Secretary of Defense for guided
missiles, as chairman; Maj. Gen.
John B. Medaris, commander of
the Army Ballistic Missile Agency
at Huntsville, Ala., and Maj. Gen.
B. A. Schriever, commander of the
Air Force Ballistic Missile Division,
which has charge of the Thor pro-
gram.
Sources at the Pentagon said that
originally the primary purpose of
3 Officers Assigned
To Sam Houston
FORT SAM HOUSTON, Tex. —
Lt. Col. Irwin T. Shaw and Lt. Col.
Henry P. Killman have been as
signed to the S-4 section at Fourth
Army Hq. here.
CWO Frank D. Jones recently
succeeded CWO James C. Norman
as chief of the officer personnel
unit, AG section.
—
ARMY TIMES
Published every Saturday hy Army Times
Publishing Company 2020 M St N W
Washington 6 D.C These papers are
not officiai publicaticns of the U.S
Army
Entered as secund-ciass matter, Oct 12
1940, Washington, D.C., under the act of
March 3, 1879 Additional! entries at New
York N Y., Wilmington Del Seattle,
Wash and St Louis, Mo
The European Edition is published each
week at Frankfurt Germany Address
Zei) 81 Frankfurt Am Main, Germany
The Pacific Edition is published each
week at Tukyo, Japan Address 605
Asahi, Shimbun Building. Main address:
Central P,\O., Box 684, Tokyo, Japan.
CHANGE OF ADDRESS
Requires three weeks’ notice. Please in
@lude both old and new addresses in the
request.
the committee was to find a way
to pick Thor (by a two-to-one vote)
while permitting the Army to “save
face.” In order to do this, a success-
ful firing of Thor was necessary.
* oa *
AIR FORCE MISSILEMEN were
jubilant late last month when Thor
was successfully fired. At this
point, they believed that the stan-
dard Air Force practice of going
ahead with an engineering contract
for an unproved “bird” could be
followed.
Idea of this practice is to get into
production on aircraft or missiles
without delay. Result is that often
hundreds, even thousands, of en-
gineering changes have to be made
in planes and missiles before they
become operational after being
built.
Civilian Defense officials have
long said this is a wasteful practice.
* » 7
IN THE COMMITTEE meetings
Gen. Medaris is said to have argued
strongly for the Army approach to
weapon system development. This
calls for @xhaustive testing of each
part of the system until its reli-
ability is proven, then putting the
components together and testing
the entire system for reliability.
Usually, the result is that con-
tracts are let later but fewer
changes are required in the product
delivered.
Medaris’ argument seems to have
persuaded at least Mr. Holaday of
the rightness of the Army ap-
proach, As a corollary, this gives
Jupiter new life and will mean that
the final choice will be made be-
tween two “finished missiles”, not
between two developmental birds.
Defense officials said there
would be no speed-up in the IRBM
program, but that testing of mis-
siles at Cape Canaveral will be
Self-Service
S
GETTING HIS new greens
creased. for Oct. 25, when the
3d Inf. Div. goes into winter
uniform, is a do - it - yourself
project for bachelor Ist Lt.
Donald Blake, division photo
officer at Fort Benning, Go.
While officers will don the new
green, most Marine Div. EM
will continue to wear olive drab.
called for under the original pro-
gram.
+e 2 *
OVER THE NEXT six. month, -as
many as 100 firings of Thor and
Jupiter at the Cape Canaveral fir-
ing range are indicated. Even after
one missile or the other is chosen,
testing is likely to continue even
after the missile picked is opera-
tional. This is standard practice, it
was said, with the continuing Army
testing of its SAM Nike-series
missiles used as an example.
Roughly 10 percent of- the test
program on each of the competing
IRBMs has been completed. This
would indicate that the test pro-
grams call for the firing of 50 to
accelerated. They said this was
missile is picked.
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WHITE SANDS, N. M.—
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andum on the roles and missions
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The Army -will test the system
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targets against enemy air attack.
If the Army should be satisfied
that the system represents an
accurate, simple to operate, easily
installed and maintained point
defense system, it may begin to use
Talos around areas for which it is
responsible.
In this case, Talos would either
replace complement or reinforce
Army Nike installations,
= * ~
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ARMY TIMES 3
OCTOBER 19, 1957
LIKE DUCKS sip shooting gallery, ‘hens tank silhouettes serve
on
the new a Armd. Div.
the targets and accuracy of the
00. feet away as the targets move at
sub-caliber range in Ger-
Special ammunition is used
im im the tanks’ .30 caliber guns for the practice.
Soldier Scientists Report
13-Hour Satellite Contact
WASHINGTON. — Army soldier
scientists on a desolate ice island
near the North Pole have reported
what is believed to be the longest
continuous contact with the Soviet
earth satellite.
Their radio monitored the
sphere for more than 13 hours on
successive days as the sphere cir-
cled the earth,
At other spots throughout the
world, the satellite’s radio signal
can ordinarily be picked up only
for about a half hour at a time as
the space vehicle passes nearby.
The soldiers were on Fletcher’s
Ice Island — a 10-mile long frag-
ment of shelf ice in the Arctic
Ocean — to make special studies
of communications near the Pole
for the Army Signal Radio Propa-
gation. Agency at Fort Monmouth,
N. J. Their valuable satellite
readings have been relayed to IGY
Vanguard Headquarters through
the Army Signal Engineering Labo-
ratories at Monmouth.
* * *
SCIENTISTS CREDIT the out-
post’s unique position — about
Doctor Making
Nike Site Calis
Via Helicopter
PHILADELPHIA — Asian flu
shots are being speeded up. for
military personnel at six Nike sites
in the Philadelphia area by . use
of an Army helicopter.
Capt. Terring W. Heironimus
Ill, Philadelphia Quartermaster De-
pot surgeon, will. be flowh to each
site to supervise immunization of
all active duty personnel at each
station. A trial run proved highly
successful in transporting the doc-
tor to three sites to give shots to
personnel absent on his first visit:
“The ‘complete circuit requires
six days for this particular job if
driven by auto,” said the doctor.
“Traveling by helicopter cuts the
time to two days.”
All of the Nike sites are within
a 30-mile radius of Philadelphia,
five of them in Pennsylvania and
one near Penns Grove, N. J.
The aerial transportation is be-
ing supplied by Headquarters, 24th
AAA Group, Swarthmore, piloted
by Capt. William M. Jordan. First
Lt. Joseph Territo, MSC, 24th AAA
Group, conceived the idea,
450 miles from the North Pole —
for the greatly extended reception.
The satellite’s radio signal, they
reason, must have come down from
space and ricocheted several
times between the earth’s surface
and the under side of the iono-
sphere like a pool ball between
+two opposite cushions.
There are few spots in the world
where such “ducting” could have
occurred to bring the signal in
consistently.
Since the station went on the
air, it has received the satellite’s
signal -almost continuously, even
when it was barely perceptible in
the U.S.- The outpost reported
two other continuous monitorings
of seven and 10 hours.
Soldiers manning the station are
SP3 Clarence W. Nash of Neche,
N.D., and SP3 Donald L. Stuck-
wisch of Warsaw, Ill.
Signal Lab
Tracking
Satellite
WASHINGTON — The
Army announced last week
that its newest high-power
direction finder has been
brought to bear on the Soviet
satellite, assisting in tracking
its orbit as far as half way
around the globe.
The high precision radio senti-
+nel. at the Army Signal Engineer-
ing Laboratories, Fort Monmouth,
N.J., is one of the more recent ad-
ditions to the military electronics
arsenal and is capable of pin-
pointing signals in any part of the
earth — and far out into space.
Since the station was alerted a
few hours after the satellite's
launching, the Army’s new equip-
ment, operating around the clock,
has sighted and followed the
sphere by radio almost every time
it circled the earth.
At 11:37 p.m., Oct. 6, the indi-
cators of the Army’s electronic
finder showed the Soviet’s space
vehicle passed almost directly over
the Fort Monmouth site.
e - *
IN OPERATION, the high-pre-
cision equipment, designed to pin-
point enemy radios in combat,
continuously scans the skies for
the satellite’s faint radio beep. Im-
medijately on contact, a prope'ler-
like pattern flashes on the elec-
tronic viewing screen to give
operators a direct and continuous
angular bearing on the sphere.
At the same time the Signal
Corp’s latest high power combat
receivers were in operation and
picked up the satellite’s signal
during 50 consecutive revolutions,
intercepting it both directly and
via the long path around the
world, spanning a distance up to
24,000 miles.
Readings are being rushed hour-
ly to the IGY Vanguard Comput-
ing Center in Washington and are
fed into giant computers that re-
eonstruct and predict the satel-
lite’s orbit
ut
|
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4 ARMY TIMES
OCTOBER 19, 1967
Nike Queen Crowned
MISS JOYCE LEE,
Fort Niagara, N.Y.,
Army Air Defense Forces.
Carol Felsman, right, last year's queen.
2d AAA Group and Fort Niagara commander.
220 Attending West Point
Prep School at Belvoir
Underwood, Jr.,
FORT BELVOIR, Va. — After
being chosen as the site for the
West Point Preparatory
last February, Fort Belvoir has
readied its rambling North
Hospital, vacated after the com
pletion of the new DeWitt Army
Hospital, to accommodate the|
cadet candidates.
The school is now well under
way in its task of preparing aspir-
ing West Pointers. The enrollment
is nearly 220 with 34 students
seeking entrance to the Air Force
Academy at Colorado Springs,
Colo.
The West Point prep school was
established in 1946, and is design-
ed to prepare students for the an
Dr. Bierring
Talk to Open
Lecture Series
WALTER REED AMC, Wash
Dr. Walter L. Bierring will give
the first in a new series of lectures
called, “The Army Surgeon Gen-
eral’s Medical Meetings,” at Stern-
berg auditorium, Walter Reed
Medical Center, at 8 p.m., Nov. 21.
The meetings will be open to all |
components of the Medical Serv
ice.
Dr. Bierring’s lecture inaugurates
a new policy under which the Sur
geon General presents four lec
ture programs each year on the
third Thursday of the months of
November, January, March and
May. This new series replaces the
monthly medical meetings which
had been sponsored by the Sur
geon General from October
through May each year since 1924
Dr. Bierring’s topic will be
“Medical Echoes”—a reflection .of
his more than sixty years in medi-
eine.
18, was crowned “Miss Nike of Niagara
Frontier” last weekend as a highlight of the military ball at
celebrating the 40th anniversary of the
The crown was presented by Miss
School
| to condition the candidates for life
Post | at the
| and academic realms of study. The
Maneuvers End
FORT STEWART, Ga. — Fort
| Stewart’s 710th Tank Bn. rolled
At left is Col. G. V.
nual entrance exams for admission
to the U.S. Military Academy.
The nine-month course is geared
Point in both the physical
discipline taught here will help the
comparable situa-
tions as a plebe.
* - *
EMPHASIS IN the classroom is
placed on mathematics, English,
and history besides numerous mili-
tary problems and subjects. The
school is open to men holding a
valid appointment to West Point
and serving on active duty in one
of the armed services. The appli-
cant must also apply for the
school in sufficient time to allow
for assignment prior to the start
of classes.
One hundred and 80 appoint-
ments are available for use by the
Regular Army, Air Force and their
Reserve components. The posi-
tions are divided into 90 for the
Regulars and 90 for the Reserve
members. Military personnel in-
terested in applying for one of
these appointments can do so by
contacting the U.S. Military Pre-
paratory School at Fort Belvoir
for particulars.
710th Tank Bn.
student meet
back into garrison recently after
concluding a five-week period of
intensive tactical training and gun-
nery qualification firing.
The battalion concluded its
training with a road march in
their M-48 General Patton tanks
and other tactical vehicles over
Fort Stewart’s tank trails from
Camp Oliver field camp, from
which the battalion had operated
FORT MEADE, Md, — An
ing high-ranking Army civil-
ian and military officials,
turned out at Fort Meade Oct,
11 to help the Second Army
celebrate its 39th birthday
with a mammoth troop review
and display of Army fire-
power.
Spectators sitting in sunny fall.
strip saw Army Secretary Wilber
Brucker highlight the occasion
with presentation of the newly
adopted Army flag to Lt. ‘Gen.
Charles E. Hart, Second Army conr
mander.
The occasion also marked Gen.
Hart’s departure from this Army
headquarters to become command-
ing general of the Army Air De-
fense Command at Ent Air Force
Base, Colorado Springs, Colo.
To music provided by the Army
Field Band, the Second Army Band
and Second Army’s Pipe and Drum
Corps, units from Fort Meade
passed in review before stands
packed with prominent figures
from Baltimore, Washington and
the seven states making up the
Second Army area. Notable among
them were Mr. Brucker, Gov. Theo-
dore R. McKeldin of Maryland,
Gen. L. L. Lemnitzer, Vice Chief
of Staff, Department of the Army,
and Maj. Gen. Ralph A. Palladino,
chief of Army Reserves and ROTC
Affairs, Department of the Army.
7 * *
FOLLOWING THE estimated
4000 parading troops with their
wind-whipped banners came ranks
estimated 5000 people, includ- _
weather at the Second Army air- |
2d Army Marks 39th Anniversary
ARMY SECRETARY Wilber M.
Siecihiet éupldhia ths mooning
and significance of the new Army flag presented last week to
the Second Army on its 39th yan | at Fort Meade, Md,
Looking on, right, is Lt. Gen. Charles E
commander.
of armored mechanized equipment,
including light and medium tanks,
armored personnel carriers from
the 2d Armd, Cav. Regt., self-pro-
pelled 8-inch and 155mm howitzers.
A flyover of Army aircraft trail-
ing vari-colored smoke streamers
followed a mobile display of the
Army’s missile family, composed
of the Honest John and Little John,
Nike-Hercules, Nike-Ajax, the
Hawk, the Dart and the Corporal.
. Hart, Second
After conclusion of the parade,
spectators flocked to slopes sur-
rounding the airstrip to inspect a
helicopter display and get a closer
look at the Army’s missiles.
Personnel Post
FORT GORDON, Ga. — Lt. Col.
Lyle E. Widdowson has been as-
signed to the personnel division
at the Signal Training Center
here.
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_ OCTOBER 19, 1%,
ARMY TIMES 6
"Smiles for Dollars
SOMEHOW, donations to the United Givers Fund at Fort Lewis,
Wash., didn't seem as painful
Helping to raise the donations b
of Puget Sound coeds, Beverly
this week as in previous drives.
a good figure were two College
vet and Rosalie Rosso. Fork-
ing over the money here is SP2 Freddie L. Marquez of Co. C,
34th Armor.
Arkansas Guard Estimated
Costing $95
WASHINGTON — The cost of
maintaining the Arkansas National
Guard in federal status to prevent
disorders in the Little Rock school
integration crisis was estimated
last week at $95,000 a day, For
Army Guard elements the daily op-
erating cost for pay, allowances,
substances and quarters was ¢Cal-
culated at about $79,000, the Army
announced.
Figures on the Air Guard units
were not yet available, but the
Army set the probable daily ex-
pense at $13,000.
A preliminary estimate of all
transportation costs, including gas
and oil, was pegged at $3000 a day.
The entire bill reportedly will be
footed by the Department. of the
Army. In addition to the Arkansas
Guard expenses, a charge will be
made by the Air Force for trans-
porting 1000 paratroopers to the
Little Rock area, an Army spokes-
man said. No immediate estimate
could be made immediately of the
extra costs for maintaining the
paratroopers, it was reported.
* + ”
THERE WAS NO indication in
the Pentagon that currently budg-
eted Reserve component programs
might be affected by the unex-
pected outlay of funds by the
Fort Riley Museum
Gets Medical Relic
FORT RILEY, Kans.—Although
Fort Riley’s Historical Musevm has
been open just a few weeks, relics
are pouring in at a gratifying rate.
The most recent object to be
turned in was a medical pill box
carried by doctors in this area dur-
ing the period from 1900 to about
1925.
The box was presented to Maj.
Gen. David H. Buchanan, com-
manding general, by Weir R. Kirk,
administrator of the Riley County
Hospital in Manhattan.
Kirk said he obtained the old box
from Munn’s Medical Supply in
Topeka, Kans., who found it among
a group of salvage items they re-
cently received.
,000 Per Day
Army. However, some apprehen-
sive planners pointed out that in-
direct consequences were possible
because of the tight spending ceil-
ing under which the Army is oper-
ating and the close tie-in with many
Reserve activities,
Such unforseen costs coming at
this time, it was said, add to the
pressures that are forcing the ac-
tive Army to cut back personnel,
stretch-out procurement and dis-
tribution of supplies and equip-
ment, trim activities and close
some bases.
Old Battle Flag
Of 98 Back
With 16th Inf.
FORT RILEY, Kans, — Tattered
and faded, but still legible, the
battle flag used by the 16th Inf.
in their famed charge up San Juan
Hill has been returned to the regi-
ment,
San Juan Hill, topped by a
Spanish-held blockhouse, lay be-
tween the 16th and their objective,
the city of Santiago. On the morn-
ing of July 1, 1898 the 16th joined
in the successful charge and did
not halt until their battle flag was
placed on top of the hill.
According to Pvt. Carlos O. Mel-
endez of Co. D, 16th Inf., a native
of Santiago, Cuba, the historic hill
is just another suburban housing
area now.
“But everyone in Santiago has
heard of the 16th,” said Melendez
“In the fifth grade I was told of
their famous charge. It’s a thrill to
see the actual flag.”
The memento was donated to the
16th by H. E. Powers of Pough-
keepsie, N.Y., who said he re-
ceived it from a Capt, Conan.
Air Officer Named
GOVERNORS ISLAND, N. Y.—
Lt. Col. Gordon L. Kinley has been
assigned as aviation officer for
First Army.
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6 ARMY TIMES
OCTOBER 19, 1957
A Better Mousetrap
MSGT. ERVIN B. JOHNSON, 2d Bn., 34th Inf, prepares a trap
for the hungry rat that recently ate his way through Eighth Army,
1 Corps and 24th Div. papers. The sergeant thinks that anybody
who digests all that info might
be useful around the office.
Pennsylvanians May Still
Apply for War II Bonus
HARRISBURG, Pa.—War II vet-
erans who failed to apply for their
Pennsylvania benefit are
urged to take of the
newly extended which
bonus
advantage
deadline
permits applications to be filed up |
to Dec. 31, 1958
The previous deadline was Dec. |
31, 1956 and some veterans, for
one reason or another, never got
around to filing for the payment
Veterans who have not previous:
ly applied for the Keystone State
bonus for War II service may ob-
tain application forms by
t. the Pennsylvania World War II
Veterans’ Compensation Bureau,
Room 207, South Office Bldg., Har-
risburg, Pa.
Bonus authorities stress that this
is not a new bonus but an extension
of the deadline for filing applica-
tions for those who have not filed
previously because of conditions
beyond their control.
New Missile
REDSTONE ARSENAL, Ala. -
Robert Lusser, guided missiles reli-
ability coordinator at
Arsenal, has received a patent for
his invention of a new
stabilizer for missiles.
launching
writing |
Army Scientist Patents
Redstone |
| Payment is $15 per month
|for foreign service and $10 per
month for domestic service in U.S.
or allied forces between Dec. 7,
1941 and Sept. 2, 1945, up to $500
maximum. Any person on active
duty on Sept. 2, 1945 may count
service prior to March 3, 1946.
Applicant must have been a legal
resident of Pennsylvania at time
of entry into military service.
| Next-of-kin are recognized in
following order Unremarried
widew, minor children, parents.
|The $500 maximum is payable to
next-of-kin of war dead; otherwise,
amount of veteran’s bonus if he
were alive.
* * *
ANY READER of this newspa-
per may get information on State
bonus payments by writing to the
ARMY TIMES Service Center, 2020
V St., NW, Washington 6, D.C. To
facilitate handling, enclose a stamp-
ed, self-addressed envelope.
Stabilizer
-; search and development team since
| July, 1954.
| He came to this country under a
| Navy contract in April 1948 after
| distinguishing himself in sueh
piloting racing
planes and designing piloted air-
cralt
diverse endeavors as
transferred
where he
He later
| Ordnance
to Army
became reli-
The device can be used for the
launching of missiles from ships
or from the ground. It increases}
the safety and stability of the
launching operation by applying ¢
calibrated retarding force to the
rear of the missile fuselage during
launching. This counteracts un-|
desired deviations of the missile in}
very early flight. The stabilizing
force is applied by means of a thin
cable which is payed out from the
launcher.
coordinator
missiles
| ability
guides
Ist Bot. Gp. CO
FORT BENNING, Ga
ham I
| mand
for Army
—Col. Wil-
Yarborough assumed com-
this week of the Ist Bat.
Lusser, the man who headed the | Gp., 7th.Inf. 3d Div., replacing Col.
project that developed the German
V-1 “buzz bomb”, has been a mem-
ber ef the Redstone Arsenal re
William M. Summers who departed
Jast month for an assignment in
Washington
QM Warns of Improper Uniforms
WASHINGTON.—The Quartermaster General reminded all this week that any dress
or semi-dress uniforms they buy from sources other than Army QM stores must have in
them a warranty label, bearing. os aetive otras number. Since Sept. 16,
Ist Missile
Unit Marks
12th Year
FORT BLISS, Tex. — The first
guided missile unit in the history
of the U.S. armed forces cele-
brated its twelfth anniversary Oct.
11 at the Army Air Defense Cen-
ter, Fort Bliss.
The Ist Guided Missile Bn., was
activated Oct. 11, 1945. It’s first
job was to support the Army Ord-
nance Department at White Sands
Proving Ground, N.M., and the
Navy at Pt. Mugu, Calif., during
the early days of the guided mis-
sile program.
The battalion, part of the Ist
Guided Missile Brigade of
Fort Bliss, has traditionally been
the first to implement new theories
and techniques.
A list of “firsts” include:
1, First all-soldier unit to fire a
missile in the United States (A
Wac Corporal—i947).
2. First to record missile veloci-
ties on tape.
3. Fired first Nike Ajax missile
at Red Canyon Range, N.M. (Sept.
1953).
Organization Day
activities in-
cluded flag football, volleyball,
tug-of-war, horseshoes and foot
races.
82d Abn. Div.
Gets ‘Mules’
FORT BRAGG, N.C—A mule-
train moved at a steady gait onto
the Fort Bragg military reservation
last week and, before being turned
over to the 82d Abn. Div., 12 Army
mules were put through their paces
by post ordnance,
The mules, each one weighing
900 lbs., worth $2100 and branded
with an Army serial number, are
being integrated into the training
schedule of the pentomic, complete: |
ly air-transportable 82d Airborne. |
These workhorses were olive-
drab Mechanical Mules, each one
eapable of toting 1000 pounds.
Contest Spurs
Recruiting in
5th Army Area
CHICAGO. — The Army Com-
mander’s Sweepstakes award is the
goal of spirited competition among
the 12 recruiting main stations in
key cities throughout the Fifth
Army area.
The contest is now in its fourt\
year. In addition to monthly win-
ners, there is an annual award to
the top-place station at the close
of the fiscal year June 30.
Contest judging is based on the
percentage of enlistments of men
and women with prior service and
of newcomers to the Army by the
recruiting teams of the respective
stations. Percentages are based
upon the number signed up in ratio
to established quota objectives
Last month, the Detroit recruit-
ing main station captured
tions by enlisting a total of 320
personnel, 137.8 percent over thei:
month’s quota of 259. Bonus
points also are awarded, one point
for each enlistment over quota.
The Detroit station repeated a
victory scored in July. The In
dianapolis station was the winner
for August.
form”. They are not held respon-
sible for this if their uniforms bear
a warranty label.
However, they are not automati-
cally permitted to wear an off-color
uniform, The improper uniform
must be replaced. The manufactur-
‘Info Chief
WASHINGTON — Col. William
R. Clark recently assumed his new
duties as Chief of Information for
the Military District of Washing-
ten. He succeeds Lt. Col. John F.
Nicholas, who will act as his dep-
uty.
bases worldwide.”
plied to OVERSEAS
worldwide,
sion.
printed a Defense Department
announcement of the names of
27 life insurance firms which
had been given permission to
solicit life insurance “at U.S,
The story should have made
clear that the permission ap-
The listing resulted from a
routine annual review of life
insurance companies that have
applied for authority to solacit
on military bases overseas.
Army Times regrets the omis-
uniform is found te be non-regula-
make sure that it meets
cs igh : celled. tea is a
Manufacturers of cloth and of
; Uniforms of non
so ceding wap oe regulation shoul pe peat fe Mick
form Quality Control Board at|*°F es the QMG said.
Natick, Mass. PA peak
Men whose uniforms do’ a Co
pear to meet Army salar tae rrection
dards are considered “not in uni- Three weeks ago, Army Times
bases
EDGEMERE “B”
the |
coveted plaque, topping other sta- |
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| .
“SHAPE UP,” suggested 34-26-37 Lt. Jeane Wolcott to the 96-
woman WAC Det. at Yokohama, Japan.
last week when she suggested the gals get girdles and falsies,
where necessary. Here she inspects the uniforms of PFC Freda
Staton, left, and SFC Rita Dittmer.
girl su ion.
the uni
issue an “order,” just a girl-to-
isn’t walk cedaued
dip in front of the shoulders.
take the dip out. So will falsies.”
/ she said, *
She caused a furor
Lt. Wolcott said she didn’t
“When a Wac
has a tendency to
Padding at the shoulders will
Officers Told of Army Role
In Washington Legislation
FORT BENNING, Ga.—Army re-
lations with Congress this week
were depicted for 800 students at-
tending the Infantry School’s ad-
vanced officers classes by Col.
Keith L. Ware of the Army’s Office
of Legislative Liaison,
Col. Ware outlined legislative or-
ganization and procedures, touch-
ing in particular on the 37-member
Armed Services committee headed
by Georgia’s Sen. Richard Russell.
“Russell’s actions play a major
role in what the Army and armed
services will receive from Congress
next term,” he noted in explaining
that a committee’s recommenda-
tions usually are accepted by the
entire Congress.
The speaker pointed out the
diverse loyalties influencing solons
concerning the closing of military
installations.
These closings are contrary to
the constituent and district interest
of each congressman and senator
affected. From a local point of
view it is a very difficult thing.
Yet if cuts must be made, he
knows for the good of the country
these installations must be closed,”
Col. Ware said.
“The Army must keep Congress
informed of its activities. We must
be good salesmen if we are to sell
our product and must have a good
product to sell, he stressed.
In presenting the Army picture
to Congress, we are in competition
not only with the Air Force and
Navy, but with taxpayers selling
tax cuts, isolationists and advocates
of push button warfare, Col. Ware
brought out.
Twelve hundred bills were in-
troduced in the first session of the
85th Congress on behalf of the
military alone, he said. He added
that the Office of Legislative
Liaison must scrutinize each bill,
military or otherwise, which comes
before Congress for the most in-
nocuous appearing might have far-
OCTOBER 19, 1957
ARMY TIMES 7
e KHAKI CAPSULES e
ATCH your step, men, the girls
are learning Judo. Two Fort
Devens Wacs who give lessons in
their spare time to members of
the YWCA and other groups, now
are coaching dependents. The
girls claim it develops coordination
and grace in addition to teaching
the basics of self defense. Hhhmm.
©
“There’s gold in them thar hills,”
quips MSgt. Harold A. Stokes, serv-
ing with the 19th Inf. Regt. in
Korea. Stokes, who first panned for
gold during an assignment in
Alaska, doesn’t expect to strike it
rich, but regards prospecting sim-
ply as a hobby. “It’s like fishing,”
he says, “there is more fun in the
doing than in the getting.”
.
Brown, Brown & Brown may
sound like the name of a legal firm,
but actually it’s only roll call at
the orderly room of Co. L, 60th Inf,
at Fort Carson. ist Lt. Arthur E.
Brown is CO, Ist Lt. Donald R.
Brown is Exec, and the company
clerk is Pvt, Stewart Brown.
«
A traffic problem at Fort Sheri-
dan has been solved by an in-
genious yet simple device—slip-
covers for permanent speed limit
signs. During bad weather the
black top streets become so
slippery that slower driving is
necessary, 80 canvas slipcovers
bearing reduced speed limits are
placed over the regular signs.
*
A space-minded moppet from
New South Wales, Australia, re-
cently told White Sands Proving
Ground scientists he is willing to
let them in on his secret of space
travel. He offered to let them
join him on an interplanetary trip
in return for air transportation for
a visit to White Sands.
-
Home on the Range: PFC Ar-
thur N. McClellan is equally pro-
ficient whether it’s a gas range or
a cattle range. In civilian life he
was a cowhand; now he’s a baker.
oe
The man who drove the first
jeep ever used on the Isthmus of
Panama has returned for his third
tour of duty at Fort Kobbe. He is
MSgt. William Frandsen, recently
assigned to the 20th Inf.’s 8-3
section.
«
If you'd like to try something
new next time you take pen in
hand, you might get an idea from
PFC James E. Brescoll of the
Fort Ord photo section. Jim has
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‘
® EDITORIALS
Chiselling
The worst impact of the government’s
balance-the-budget-at-any-cost drive is, of
course, upon the readiness of our defenses.
Atop the first 100,000-man cut, with its cor-
responding reduction in weapons and civil-
jan employee support, has been piled a
similar reduction. More will undoubtedly
follow.
In addition, there is also to be considered
the impact upon the officers and men who
must be let. out of all the services.
The survivors of the cutbacks will pay
too, in many ways. Some of these ways,
such as a reduced number of promotions, are
inevitable. But two instances of what we
think is very unwise economy have come to
light. We refer to the reduction in commis
sary funds and the refusal to adjust the
commuted ration value.
The President has ordered that receipts
into many revolving funds shall ge into the
treasury, instead of being paid out again,
as intended. One of the funds so affected
is the “capital” of the services’ commiasaries.
Instead of being used to repurchase food-
stocks, much of the money being collected
at commissaries is going right into the
treasury. As a result, the service stores
are “hurting” for cash—the Air Force worst
of all, the Army next, with the Navy not
immune and bound to suffer increasingly
unless the President reverses his order.
As a result of the fund shortage, com-
missaries are restricting the brands offered
and practicing other economies, mostly at
the expense of the service family.
All of this amounts to curtailment of a
service benefit which is badly needed by
families whose budgets already have been
pinched by the increase in the cost of living
since the last pay raise, 214 years ago. Of
what real value to them is a commissary if
there is virtually no selection of merchandise
on the shelves?
The blow is especially unwarranted be-
cause it is no economy at all.
commissaries stay in operation, the fixed
charges which the customers @o not pay
space and employee salaries—will go on. The
cut is in the revolving fund for stock pur-
chases; and customers pay this back to the
Jast cent as they buy, with a three percent
markup to cover spoilage, supplies, trans-
portation and utilities, to boot.
As for the commuted ration, former De-
fense Secretary Wilson refused to increase
the present $1 a day allowed, because, he
said, there “had been a slight drop in the
food price level.”” Anyone noticed such a
drop?
As a matter of fact, it now costs $1.08
per man per day for the raw food used in
general messes. It would take more than
a “slight drop” to make the present $1 rate
equitable. When food prices did decline a
bit, Defense was quick enough to cut the
ration from $1.10 to $1.05 on 1 Sept. 1954;
to $1 on 1 Sept. 1956.
Then costs went up again—but the com-
muted ration did not.
For months, enlisted people therefore
have been short-changed on a legitimate part
of their pay. And now, to save a few dollars,
Defense continues this petty chiselling.
That’s not a pleasant word. But what
other term can be used to describe the new
decision?
So long as
‘Gee, What a Mind You‘ve Got, Orviel’
Y
set up cafeteria style or the wor
given to those of lower grade who
need the money.
If a master sergeant aspires to b>
a waiter for his superiors, then
ip him to.that Jevel as he has
established. that the weight o*
those six stripes means nothing 10
arn he has, as water, found h’s
2
these -positions are certainly not
concerned about the man or the
importance of the grade in our
structure.
Bring the employment of NCOs
in officers open messes (except for
administration and supervisory per-
sonnel) to a screaming halt, and
force these ‘coffee coolers’ to
soldier ALL the time or bust them
flat and give the ribbons te men
who will appreciate them and not
@ COMMENT
RIF Killing the Incentive
By MAJ. J. H. STUBBS
Austin, Tex.
As manpower ceilings are reduced, it is obvious that some means of
effecting the reduction must be found that is more equitable than the
one being used. No system can be entirely
fair to everyone. But the
goal should be to find as nearly equitable a procedure as can be worked
on a practical basis
By keeping on active duty officers hav-
ing the skills and education needed by the
service, while eliminating those no longer
needed on a logical, predictable basis,
would avoid the major weakness of the
present plan.
This weakness is simply that the RIF
programs are destroying the Army’s pro-
curement system for young career officers.
The young lieutenant entering on ac-
tive duty for two years sees an Army
wherein his pay lags behind the scale of
industry. Worse yet, he sees an Army
which lacks a career personnel program.
He is encouraged to stay on active duty,
but no real career program is offered him.
He sees officers of long and competent
service, actively performing critical as-
signments, released for reasons of tempor-
ary expediency.
In a word, he is asked to gamble his and
his family’s future on a temporary job that
can be cut off at any moment for reasons
largely beyond his control.
” ” 7
THE ARMY is not getting — in either
the officer or enlisted ranks — an ade-
quate careerist in-put. And, as the older
men retire and leave, there is not an ade-
quate group, either numerically or by pro-
fessional qualification, in the lower ranks
to advance and carry on the Army’s de-
velopment.
This seems to me to be the damning as-
pect of the RIF system.
If we are to have an effective Army, the
service must offer to the man entering it
not only an adequate pay, put also an Op-
portunity to advance and develop his job
MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS
LARGEST A.B.C. CIRCULATION IN THE U. 8. ARMY
Von. EVii—Ne 11 “Gis er
ARMY TIMES
OCT. 19, 1957
into a career. No reasonable being will
tie his future and that of his family to an
enterprise which does not offer every em-
ployee a chance to better himself and to
enjoy a eareer with the attendant rights
of retirement and fringe benefits which
modern industry now. offers its recruits
as a matter of routine.
Tony March, EDITOR
@® ARMY TYPES by Berger
Executive
use grade as leverage to obtain
jobs’ as flurkies.
The sooner the NCO is educated
to his position in the setup and
backed to the hilt in performance
as such, then and only then, ean
a stvipe mezn anything except at
the pay. table.
Jerk these birds from behind
bars, Out of coats and aprons as
mess boys and'see if they can per-
form the duties required of their
grade and show evidence that the
promotion board (what beard?)
was not entirely in error.
Let those responsible dig. back
into the book and learn of the pres-
tige and respect accorded AL!’
NCOs. when every post, camp and
station had an NCO staff, compesed
of the sergeants major of activitie:
thereon, who watched performance
and conduci of all top graders and
insisted that they in turn let it rub
off on the juniors.
Yes—NCOs have lost prestige
and it can never be regained so
long as they are satisfied to be any-
thing less than the best.
NCO
* oe *
Says Red Cross
Has Heavy Load
CHARLOTTESVILLE, - Va.: - I
must answer the letter, published
October 5 in Army Times, from the
lieutenant in Saudi Arabia who is
incensed at the American Red
Cross because it failed to notify
him of his baby’s birth.
Only for the last year has it been
Red Cross. policy to send birth and
death notices, upon request, to serv-
ice personne] overseas. Prior to
that time such messages were sent
by. Red Cross-only when the re-
cipient could not be reached
through commercial channels.
It is a regrettable mistake that
this notice was not forwarded. |
don’t blame the young man for be-
ing upset. However, he should
realize that the Red Cross is a huge
(See LETTERS, Page 38)
SENIOR EDITORS
Karl Sprinkle, MANAGING EDITOR
Mel Ryder, Don Mace, John Slinkman.
ASSOCIATE EDITORS
Carol Arndt, Bob Baechtold, Monte Bourjaily, Jr., Robert Horowitz, George Marker; Tom Scanlan
Centributing Editers:
Bruce Callander.
Larry Carney, Don Curte, LeMonte Davis, John J. Ford, William Fess, Ed Gates,
Rowland Gould, Les Honeycutt, Bob Jones, Bill Kreh, Jack Kuett, William McDonald, John Neubauer, Bill Olcheski, Dave
Art Editer: John Stampone
rt Watt, Tom Wuvriu.
Pollard, Teny Polozzolo, Macon Reed, Ellis Rottman, Allen Scott, Héndall Shoemaker, Steve Tillman, John M. Virden,
A
Evropean Editor: John Wiant
Those who place top graders in.
Ge ae i ee 8 tte, ae ae oe a eh a
of of Ga wt om
a a. ts. s )
=~ SS eS) slo
wa ov eT
Aw ae we fe
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d
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at
id
as
T-
ir
ne
?)
ck
ad
ed
ce
nd
ub
ge
so
ly-
ed
is
ed
ify
en
ind
TV-
ent
re-
ed
hat
be-
ud
ige
lan
ites,
lave
jen,
iant
The Kibitzer’s Seat
the AP Editors Association of news
suppression for reasons other than
security. The Moss committee has
tried to find out what government
information pol-
icy is and how
it operates. In-
quiries have
been met with
evasion, casuis-
ey. and petti-
Until now,
however, there
been no
positive proof
that the Ad-
ministration’s top informa-
mation policy’ makers have failed
in their jobs. , Up to now, there
has only been debate, charges,
countercharges, and confusion.
Today the proof that these in-
formation experts and advisers to
the President, the Secretary of
State and the Secretary of Defense
failed is absolute. It exists in the
presence in the sky of the first
man-made object to escape the
atmosphere of the earth for a
planned locus in space.
The presence of the Sputnik in
its orbit not only represents a
scientific achievement by the Rus-
sians. It also demonstrates the
bankruptcy in ideas of what the
Washington press corps has called
the “Madison Avenue” influence on
the Eisenhower Administration.
In 1954, the Army said privately
that there was sufficient progress
in rocketry so that within a year
a satellite could be placed in the
sky. A proposal to do so- was
turned down.
In September 1956, the Army
was ready again to try to launch
a satellite. When it fired Jupiter
C, one additional stage could have
been fired which would have orbit-
ed. The Army’s proposal to fire
this additional stage was not only
turned down. I have been reliably
told that an officer was detailed
from Washington to Florida to as-
sure that the final stage was not
put in an orbit.
©
= 7
ABOUT TWO YEARS AGO (and
several times previously) now re-
tired Defense Secretary Charles E.
Wilson was asked at press confer-
ences if the U.S. was going ahead ,
with a satellite program.
Mr. Wilson’s answer was that he
didn’t see that any good could
come from such a program, There
were more important things to do,
like balancing the budget and con-
tinuing to assure the -public that
the U.S. was ahead of Russia and
that we are living in the best of
all possible ways in the best of
all possible worlds. The dangers
seen by newspaper columnists and
Administration critics were fig-
ments of professional Cassandras.
Mr. Wilson’s attitude was reflect-
Pa. Absentee Ballot
Forms Available
HARRISBURG, Pa. — Men who
maintain a residence in Pennsyl-
vania may request an absentee
military ballot form from the
county election board of the county
where their residence is located.
The request must contain name,
rank, date of_ birth, residence at
time of entrance into military serv-
ice, military address, branch of
service and serial number, length
of time a citizen, length of time of
residence in Pa., ‘voting district,
and length of time a resident of
voting district.
Give the Heave-Ho
To Poor Advisers
Th2 top information and public relations advisers in the
oo comm have long been under attack in Congress and
many members of the press for the ways in which they
handle information. Over 100 cases are being gathered* by
ed and reinforced by that of Mr.
Dulles, who said that news and
newspaper men, particularly in
foreign affairs, were an element of
the American propoganda arsenal,
ae facts and the reporters of
acts.
Mr. Eisenhower himself took
much the same position as did Mr.
Wilson.
7 . .
THE RESULT has been of
course, an international disaster
for the United States.
The information advisers (or
public relations men) had neither
the imagination to see what put-
ting a satellite above the earth
would mean to the people of the
world, nor the guts to try to sell
their conclusions, if any, to their
bosses—Mssrs. Eisenhower, Wil-
son, Dulles, and others.
Thus they have failed abysmally
in their jobs.
Those who have failed in one
most important part of their jobs
cannot be trusted in other im-
portant areas, such as assuring that
the news—the facts and all the
facts—about their government get
to the people.
My concern is not with those on
the “indian” level, Many—even
most—of the information people
on the working level whom I meet
daily are trying like hell to get
the conclusions that they draw as
the result of disciplined imagina-
tion through to. their “bosses.
. - * °
OCTOBER 19, 1957
ARMY TIMES 9
4th Armd. Begins Gyro Move
FORT HOOD, Tex. — Nearly one third of the troops assigned to the 4th Armd. Div.,
accompanied by more than 1300 dependents, started moving out over last weekend in the
first large exodus on the gyroscope exchange of duty stations with the 2d Armd. Div.
in Europe.
The men were from units of
Combat Command “B,” headed by
Col. Jackson S. Lawrance’* They
are assigned to the 2d Armd. Rifle
Bns. of the 50th and 5ist Inf., and
the 2d Medium Tank Bn., 67th
Armor. Other units moving at this
time are the 1st Howitzer Bn., 22d
Artillery, 2d Bn. (Rocket-Howitzer)
of the 16th Arty. and supporting
medical, signal, ordnance, quarter-
master and engineer units.
The departing soldiers will leave
in groups, their departure date
hinging on the date they are sched-
uled to sail from New York. Those
leaving over the weekend are due
to board their ship at New York
on Nov. 5. Other ships will sail
on Nov. 9, 15 and 20, with the
troops departing here in sufficient
time. to take a two week leave at
their homes before traveling to the
port of embarkation.
” . +
IN PREPARING for the move
units have been thoroughly trained,
man’s approach of telling the peo-
ple either what they want to hear
or selecting the facts for release
that will produce a buyers’ attitude
for the policies of the Administra-
tion aren’t adequate.
As a result of this approach,
we’ve lost a major campaign in
the eyes of the world. Though
ways exist to salvage much of the
debacle, those who have led us
to defeat can’t be trusted to win
back what we have lost—world
leadership and our former position
as the world’s leading power.
BUT between them and such as
Wilson, Dulles and Eisenhower are
administrators and advisers of lit-
tle imagination, fear for their jobs,
love of the status quo. These in-
betweeners form the policy and
give the advice. They should go
now.
Business as usual and the ad-
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in the field and in garrison. Their
schooling has covered all military
aspects of their particular assign-
ment within their unit, they have
been taught proper shipboard pro-
cedures and have been briefed on
the customs of the German people.
They will be combat ready when
théy reach their destination.
Dependents have been indoctrin-
ated in the various phases of the
huge movement, with many units
holding night classes for the wives
and ¢hildren to dispense informa-
tion concerning movement pro-
cedure and their new homes.
When the 4th Armd. troops
reach Germany a comparable
group of 2d Armd. Div. soldiers
will board the transports with theif
dependents for the return trip.
After taking leave time to visit
their homes in this country they
will report to Fort Hood to fill the
gap left by the departing 4th Armd.
units.
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10 ARMY TIMES» OCTOBER 19, 1957
‘What PX & Commissary Mean to Me’
- Belonging
(EDITOR’S NOTE: Recently Army Times asked readers to write
in short essay form on the subject of “What the PX and Commissary
Mean to Me.” We offered $25 for each essay printed, but said we
hoped to gather most of them in portfolio form for presentation to
Pentagon planners in the hope they would be of help in combating
attacks he these institutions before Congress. Following is this week’s
winner.
By Maj. F. M. WATSON JR.
University of Georgia, Athens
It goes without saying that the soldier needs the PX and com-
missary from a .financial standpoint. Regardless of his rank, his
nomadic life has expenses that aren’t apparent, even to him, until
he starts spending his pay “off post.”
It is also an undeniable fact that the soldier and his family need
the familiar surroundings provided by the PX and the commissary
as they move from state to state and from country to country. They
seldom live in one place long enough to know all the merchants in
town; they often feel friendless in strange places. The PX and com-
missary are familiar places, relatively the same everywhere and they
have faith in them automatically.
All this is true, but the PX and commissary are a part of Army
life that fills a need we can’t put our hands on. Yet, it’s probably
tied in with the most basic feeling that a man has about being in the
Army—belonging.
. - ”
BEING IN THE ARMY is a “belonging” job. A soldier_belongs
to an outfit and the outfit, in turn, belongs to him. It’s his platoon,
his company—his PX, “our” commissary.
This belonging is necessary for an Army to be successful. The
men in an outfit belong to it or the outfit can’t do the kind of job a
military organization is called. upon to do. It’s either their outfit
or it’s no outfit at all.
All of our great military leaders have recognized this need for
“belonging” in military life and have used every means they could
find to impress on the soldier that he is realiy a part of his unit
Look at the distinctive insignia, the shoulder patches, unit citations
and organizational colors. Look at the bulletin boards, company signs
and literature on “pride in your unit.” The PX and commissary are
part of this life the soldier belongs to—they are as exclusively his
as the uniform he wears or the oath he took when he put on that
uniform. What the insignia, the shoulder patches and posters tell
the soldier about the. exclusiveness of his profession can be proved
to him at the PX counter or along the shelves of the commissary.
This knowledge that he is in a special category, that he really
stands out from people who don’t wear the uniform, enables him to
do some of the harder things that he is called upon to do. It’s fine
enough to tell a man that he is as distinctive as the uniform he wears,
but if you expect him to keep on believing that he is, you’ve got to
prove it. In the PX and commissary, he can prove it to himself.
* ~ *
BUT, WHAT ABOUT HIS FAMILY? They don’t wear a uniform
or a shoulder patch, yet they must belong, too. The wife is an “Army
wife”; the children are “Army brats.” But, they don’t “follow the
trade” on those names alone. No woman could be expected to make
the sacrifices that an Army wife does unless she was allowed to feel
that she “belonged.” The loyalty of Army children stems not from
a name, but from a complete conviction that they belong—just ask
them. It’s their PX and their commissary that we're talking about
and they have every reason to think so.
As far as the Army family belonging—that’s been recognized by
the same leaders that made sure the soldier knew he belonged. In
fact, they have sometimes gone to almost ridiculous extremes trying
to make the families feel that they belonged, because they knew it was
important. The PX and the commissary are the most tangible and
effective devices they have come up with.
* 7 +
FOR THE SOLDIER, there are many ways that his membership
in the soldiering profession can be touched, felt, demonstrated. He
wears a uniform, he eats in a mess hall, he parades with his unit, he
has Army equipment in his possession—he has an Official status.
For his wife, his children, the ways they can be brought into
Army life are rather few. If they live on the post, they hear the
band, see the flag, talk to other Army families. If they don’t live
on the post—and far too many don’t—how many of these contacts
are theirs?
In either case, what is the badge of their official status? It’s
the privilege of going to the PX and the commissary—they can enter
the official domain of the service to which the husband and father
belongs—and then they know that they too, belong.
10Ist Receives Its First ‘Mules’
FORT CAMPBELL, Ky. — The
101ist Abn. Div. has received the
first shipment of the Army’s new
for air transportability as well as
delivery by parachute. The 101st
is the first tactical unit
mechanical mule. An Air Force} armed forces slated to be equipped
C-124 Globemaster touched down| with the battlefield equipment
at Campbell Air Force Base with | carrier.
the first 20 production models to ae
come off the assembly line at the Studies at Princeton
Willys factory plus one pilot mode] Pe en a = s
to be used in test runs and para-| j; PRINCETON, HN. J—Cagt, Wil
- am G. Kees, former recruiting of-
chute dropping. ficer for the Military District of
Twenty-one motor vehicles trans-| New York, has been assigned to
ported by one aircraft at once|Princeton University for courses
in the history and culture of the
Middle East.
maye be a record but the “mules”
are small, compact and designed
of the}
RIF Pay |
Delay Is
Offered
(Continued from Page 1)
voluntarily—under the RIF and for
category non-renewal — are enlist-
ing.
The Army decision to hold up
readjustment payments until after
the first of the year started out
as a study to see how the Army
could save those it was forced to
release from the income tax bite
which could take up to a quarter
of the pay away.
As the study progressed, it ap-
peared that the Army would not
be able to meet its December 31
spending target, that it would. ex-
ceed that target, especially in the
personnel field, particularly be-
cause of readjustment payments.
Since it was in the government’s
interest to delay paying readjust-
ment pay in order to meet the
spending ceiling set by the Presi-
dent, the Treasury approved the
idea of delaying the payments un-
til they fall into a new tax year.
By this action, men who agree
not to demand payment will keep
their incomes in. a lower tax brack-
et, pay less tax on readjustment
payments when they do get them
next year.
The program is not retroactive.
All those who have already re-
ceived readjustment pay are out
of luck on trying to delay to save
taxes. But as soon as the message
goes out—perhaps this week—men
BEST DRESSED BUM at Camp Leroy Johnson, New Orleans, Le.,
is PFC James Pryor, who is shown receiving his award. Pryor,
who won the title at the camp's Service Club hobo party, is in
the 71st Transportation Co.
Other top quality hoboes, from
left, are Pvt. Louis Wishum, PFC James Pryor, PFC Hershel
Blunt, PFC Eugene Hanneman and PFC Dwight Williams, who
judged the costumes.
involuntarily released before De-|taxes if they are willing to walt
ecember 31 will be able to save|for the money due them.
WASHINGTON. — New all-serv-
ice flight rules will soon permit
fliers with non-flying injuries or
illness to. be “grounded” but not
“suspended.” The difference in the
two terms can mean hundreds of
dollars in flight pay for the men
involved.
The new rules, alréady approved
by Defense Department, will prob-
ably take effect around the first
of the year, officials say.
What the change means, briefly,
is that a flier will no longer face
automatic suspension when he re-
ports to a hospital. He may be
grounded by the flight surgeon for
up to three months before sus-
pension is required. Until then,
however, he can be allowed to fly
simply by presenting a note from
the surgeon.
- * 2
THE PROBLEM these changes
are designed to cure involve a maze
of regulations and red tape. Under
current rules, checking in at a hos-
pital amounts to a flier’s virtually
writing his own suspension orders.
Even if his illness is minor and he
is simply not in condition to fly
for a few days, the process of sus-
pension, examination and removal
of suspension can drag on indefin-
itely.
Result of this unwieldy proced-
ure has been that some fliers who
need treatment for minor injuries
don’t check in with the flight sur-
geon for fear of suspension and
| loss of flight pay. ‘
The case of flight accident vic-
tims is different, however. A flier
who is injured in a flying accident
and hospitalized is automatically
paid his flight pay for up to three
months, whether he flies or not.
When he is returned to status, he
begins another three-month period
during which he may make up as
many as three months of flight
time.
e s s
IN EFFECT, this means an ac-
cident victim can go three months
without flying, return to status and
not fly for another two months?
then fly 12 hours and make good
the second three month period.
Since the first three months are
“free,” he has gone for nearly six
months without-flying but will col-
lect for the entire period so long
as he gets in his time in the sixth
month.
A non-flying accident is differ-
ent, however. If a flier is hurt
while not engaged in hazardous
duty, he (1) is suspended and (2)
does not get the three months’
“free” flight pay.
The inequity here is more ob-
vious in the case of survivors bene-
fits. Two fliers may be involved
in a driving accident, for example,
Lt. A is killed outright. He is on
flight status at the time of his
death and the six month gratuity
payment to his wife includes both
base and flight pay. Lt. B is taken
to the hospital in critical condition.
He is immediately suspended from
flight status but lives a few days.
When he dies, he is not on flight
status and his survivors’ benefits
do not include gratuity pay based
on his flight pay.
This particular problem is tough-
est on junior officers. Since there
is a ceiling of $3000 on death gra-
tuity, survivors of those in the
higher ranks normally get the
maximum without flight pay but
the gratuity of a lieutenant may be
some $600 or more smaller without
flight pay.
* e
THE NEW suspension rules,
which follow closest to those al-
ready in use by the Navy, should
remove several of the inequities
of the present system, officials feel.
For one thing, Lt. B in the example
above would be considered on
flight status at time of death and
his survivors would collect more
gratuity money.
Live fliers stand to benefit too,
however. They will still be ground-
ed if their illnesses warrant.. But
they will still be technically on
flight status and return to flying
duty will be a simple matter.
New Rules to Ease Fliers’ Pay
The change in suspension rules
may be only the first step on a gen-
eral overhaul of the orders sur-
rounding flying and flight pay, of-
ficials say.
Juvenile Record
Use Opposed in
Court Martial
WASHINGTON. — Let’s leave a
man’s childhood “crimes” out of it
when he comes up for a court
martial.
Se said the Court of Appeals last
week in upsetting the desertion
conviction of Pvt. Virgil Roark,
USMC,
He was absent for a couple of
long spells and the only question
was whether he intended to stay
away permanently; that intent is
what makes the crime of desertion.
He said he intended to come
back.
While he was on the witness
stand, the prosecutor tried to de-
stroy the court’s belief in his word
by bringing out that he had been
convicted as a juvenile. It is per-
fectly fair for a prosecutor to point
to the criminal record of an adult
witness, even a defendant on the
stand.
But what about the record of a
crime he committed as a child,
running afoul of the police when
he was 14% years old?
The court held that these juven-
ile court records are usually re-
garded by the-states as not being
“convictions.”
It said the Marine Corps might
give Pvt. Roark a new trial on de-
sertion charges or merely find him
guilty of absence withdut. leave
without any furthe rhearing.
The court suggested—but did not
lay down—the rule that any crime
committed before a man was old
enough to enlist might be placed
off limits to the prosecutor attack-
ing the credibility of a military
witness.
ARMY -TIMES 11
‘ARY SCENE -OCTOBER 19, 1957
al
é
>
He e
and plans for world domir
as part of that program. It has a definite
on. It establishes a world-
_ Superior ‘}linked with the Soviet military po-{ this agreement, we will in part be
“3 tential: Why should we picture| cashing in on the fear that the So-
+f S sf ape duced on a world-wide basis. We
that fact? will be accused, of course, of being
should push for-| afraid ourselves—of being “caught
strongly and firmly in de-|short.” This is too true for com-
-@ world-wide agreement /fort. We can offset this charge
to jit the use of outer space determined and immediate
a ses, and to estab- to demonstrate that we are
lish 1 scientific | going ahead with our own satellite
pa oeore gh have the ex-/ program.
right to explore and oper-| Faced with this realistic ap-
ate beyond the earth’s atmosphere. | proach, it is just possible that such
oe. It is now technically possible to} hard-boiled realist as Marshal
monitor. and “police” such an| Zhukov might decide to make a
. i agreement, It may not be possible|deal. Zhukov is probably rather
The conquest of outer space is, |to do this once large numbers of | worried, at this moment, over the
im fact, the last and only hope | missiles and “satellites” are cruis-| effect that- the satellite excitement
“Sevof Soviet world domination. ing. around in outer space. may have on the unstable, excit-
If this is to be thwarted,} Im pursuing our demand for|able Khrushchev.
the United Sates will have to take | —— ,
effective r-measures, and we
will have to move fast. " FREEII
- - o
LONG-TERM MEASURES—such YOURS ABSOLUTELY as
1 as a major reorganization of our
1 missile production—may be needed fr om GILBERT'S JEWELERS
\ later on. But this will take time.
; The immediate need is to offset
the impression of Soviet superior-
ity, not only. in.the minds of our
re friends but also in the minds of
wait the Soviet leaders and the Soviet
people.
— If this impression is allowed
te prevail for any length of time, ; .
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— “Vanguard”) program, The NRL 122 Pine Ave., Long Beach 2, Calif.
of it has been sadly handicapped (a) by .
ourt orders to keep Vanguard.entirely
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come * * *
aa THE PRESIDENT SHOULD can- EXCLUSIVE plan for
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Rolls From Derby into Frying Pan
World’s Best Skater
Cooks on All Burners
FORT LEWIS, Wash.—They’!l stand in amazement when
they hear about this back in Los Angeles.
Shelburn Gardner, a veteran of many a hazardous con-
test in the professional roller
derby ring and voted the 1954
King of his trade, is now a Fort
Lewis cook who prides himself on
his abilify. to delicately crack a
hundred eggs a alata
morning ~ with-
out breaking. a
yolk.
The seasoned
performer, who
skated with the
L. A. Braves be-
fore his induc-
tion, was noted
for his rough
and tumble tac-
tics in the derby
circuit. Five GARDNER
years of compe-
tition netted him three brain con-
cussions, 13 broken ribs, a broken
ankle, a cracked nose and a palm
full of lost teeth.
~ 7.
LOS ANGELES fans will remem-
ber Gardner as a young racing
whiz who teamed up with his wife,
Julie Patrick, to keep the home- |
| the official publication of the pro-
| fession.
town team a consistent favorite for
the league title.
es
THIS PRETTY, sloe-eyed
Bath - Sheba Kaahamanu Apo.
helping enchant Center's residents with her
songs and hulas, she has been chosen as
outstanding trainee in her outfit.
Howoiian charm-
er and 17 other Island lasses belong to
same platoon at Fort McClellan.
PFC Gardner has just completed
cook’s school at Ft. Ord, Calif.,
and is returning to his unit, Head-
quarters Company of the 8th Cal-
vary.
* * «
SKATING has been a family ‘af-
fair with Shelburn—a brother and
two sisters have also been pro-
fessional skaters. Gardner, now
24, entered the business in 1951
playing in Minneapolis against the
New . York Chiefs and the Brook-
lyn Red Devils.
After a stint with the Philadel-
phia Panthers and the Chiefs, Shel-
burn rolled to the world champion-
ship with the New Jersey Jolters
at the Madison Square Garden
Roller Derby in 1953. He was also
with the Los Angeles Braves in
1954 when they picked off the
world championship crown. The
same year, Shelburn was voted
King of the Roller Derby in a
nationwide popularity poll con-
ducted by the Roller Derby News,
She Can’‘t Shake Her A-P-O
She’s
Besides
Fort Jackson Claims Only
Officer Not U.S. Citizen
FORT JACKSON, §. (
the
Among
many residents here, the post
claims it has the only officer in the
Army who is not an American citi
zen
He is 2d Lt. Bendeguz Viragh
originally from Szh]marnemeti,
Hungary, who left his native land
for Germany in 1944.
He later came to the States and
entered Georgetown University
and while at the school] in 1953 re-
much publicity
ceived when he
| and three other runners attempted
}a cross-country marathon to Bal-
| timore and back to Washington, a
distance of 78 miles. Viragh, a star
on Georgetown’s track team, made
the non-stop run in 16 hours while
the others dropped out. After grad-
uation from Georgetown, he joined
the Army, took basic at Jackson
and later attended OCS and the
Airborne School at Fort Benning.
He is now assigned to Co. D, 19th
Bn. at Jackson.
favorite gal recording stor.
EYES A-DROOLING ond practically speechless is the off-hand |
appraisal PFC Donald W. Isphording offers to the 19th Inf.’s
She’s Japan’s Michiko Namamura
whose version of the “Banana Boat Song” has the regimental
fan club in Korea hanging from the trees.
TOKYO ARMY HOSPITAL —
Prepping for a big career as a
shipping tycoon while stationed in
Japan is. PFC John C. Blom, a
medical supply clerk here.
Formerly an assistant operations
manager with a San Francisco
shipping firm, he keeps abreast of
import-export doings by unofficial-
ly representing his company in
Japan whenever shipping men get
together. He also visits the docks
at Yokohama, Osaka, and Kobe to
observe Japanese shipbuilding
methods.
As far as his overseas training
Busiest Topkick
Oversees Five
Major Units
REGIONAL CAMP DREW, Ja-
pan—MSgt. William A. Buck, Ist
Sgt. of H&H, and all provisional
detachments assigned the com-
pany is probab-
ly first sergeant
of more men
than any other
TOE outfit in
Japan today.
6 * .
BUCK enter-
ed the Army in
1940. He was
assigned to the
llith FA Bn.,
of the 29th Inf.
Div. The divi-
sion, with Buck
moved to England in 1942, and
took part in the D Day invasion
of Normandy.
In addition to his military duties
MSgt. Buck manages to stay quite
busy. His extra-curricular activi-
ties include, president of the re-
gional NCO open mess; Boy Scout
commissioner for the Drew and
Whittington area; a member of
the Youth Activities Council; a
committee member of Cub Scout
Pack No. 5; a member of the PTA;
participant in the regional bowling
league, and Adult Sunday School
BUCK
Class teacher,
Shipping Tycoon Continues
Duties in Tokyo ‘Office’
goes, this’ is only the beginning
for him, He'll be discharged next
May and will spend a month get-
ting nautieally acquainted in Hong
Kong and Singapore. If all goes
as he expects, ‘he'll go on to Oslo
for 18 months of training in the
head office of his shipping com-
pany. After this, he'll spend six
months with the firm’s brokerage
office in London, then New York
and Chicago.
° - 3
BLOM doesn’t expect to return
to his San Francisco home until
1962!
Shipping interests are no sud-
den attraction for this youthful
tycoon.. He. traces his. leanings
back through several centuries of
his Norwegian heritage. At Stan-
ford University, he majored in
Japanese history. Even then, Blom
was already planning to fit into
the scheme of things at ’Frisco,
hub of shipping activity with. the
Orient.
Fort Riley Wac
In Unique Duty
FORT RILEY, Kans. — A Fort
Riley Wac who already holds one
unusual position will soon lay
claim to being unique in another
not only among Wacg but among
all women in the armed forces.
SP-2 Ruth B. Graves, who reen-
listed last week for a three-year
hitch, is a tower control operator
at Marshall Army Air Field, a job
for which few Wacs have trained.
In December she is going to Biloxi,
Miss., where she will take the air-
craft landing control operator
course designed to train specialists
for instrument controlled landings.
As far as she knows she will be the
first service woman to do so.
During her service with the Wac
Det. here, she has been star. swim-
mer, coach and instructor for the
women’s swimming team. The team
won the Fifth Army ‘womens’
swimming trophy three years run-
ning and has now retired it to
their conipany day room.
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tional vg dropped ¢
year. More than 3.
were builtin Flor ride in
six months’ of
Pane Real state ~ Market
F
a
“all looking for good
‘ome locations have made real es-
tate one of the most. sought after
investments in the State.
Florida’s First Salesman
Governor LeRoy Collins, in a re-
cent speech to the Sales Execu-
tive. Club of New York, brought
up many astonishing facis about
Florida’s phenomenal growth. | Fol-
lowing are some of the facts that
Goyernor Collins. proudly told his
influential audience:
1. “In 1950 Florida was 20th in
population; today. it is 13th.
Based on present growth rate,
it will be 8th in 1975.”
2. “Since 1950, Florida’s popula-
tion jumped 34%, whereas the
State total ineome-has increased
230% since 1946.”
3..“Of the 10 fastest growing cities
in the United States—three are
in. Florida.”
4. “The - growth .of- industry in
Florida has been.-the. greatest,
most: dramatic demonstration of
progress in. the nation.”
5..‘It pays to invest in Florida.”
And the interesting part of the
Florida story is that everyone can
take part in its coming future—
from the giant’ corporation to the
lower salaried employee.
Excellent Homesite Buys
Several major land developments
in Florida attest to the fact that
the American of modest means is
investing ‘in Florida.
Florida Shores, a huge homesite
development’ located in the city of
Edgewater, just south of New
Smyrna and Daytona Beach has
already «sold lots’ to: more than
2,500 families. Many are planning
to retire here, and are buying their
land at today’s prices—while they
are still amazingly .low. Florida
Shores sells its land in lot units of
40x125 feet at $495.00 per lot. The
modest $10 reservation deposit
and the low monthly terms make
this an ideal investment for every-
one.
All Community Services
And Improvements
Florida Shores is unusual in that
it is the largest land devélopment
in the State actually located with-
in a city—the City of Edgewater,
Florida, located just south of Day-
tona Beach:
The development offers its resi-
dents paved streets and electricity,
complete police and fire protec-
tion, garbage collection, nearby
schools, churches, shopping areas,
a complete drainage control sys-
tem and even an adjacent water-
front :park onthe Indian River.
Diversified social and recreational
activities are also available at
Edgewater Community Center.
l
re
a+ -. —_—T
aS Ve YS Pes eS
New Smyr.a Beach, 2.6 mi,
Beytens Seach. 19mi. |
Atiantic Ocean,
5.8 mi
SMYRNA
ke
‘Rete
EDGEWATER
Pe:
a ©
in Daytona
FLORIDA SHORES, the largest land
development in a Florida city, now
offers even more advantages as
your future residential homesite. This
premium property is located im the
world famous Daytona Beach area
—with the refreshing Atlantic Ocean
nearby. Cool summer. trade-winds
make this area the most popular part
of the entire State of Florida during
the summer months.
For year-round healthful, happy
days your homesite at Florida Shores
represents the finest.in Florida—
ideal for retirement, vacation home
or every day living.
More important— schools, churches,
shopping, hospital and all types
of recreation, and amusements are
all nearby! Ne waiting years for
these services.
By purchasing your homesite at
Florida Shores today—you assure
yourself of excellent locction—at
rock-bottom prices.
World's safest beach
60-DAY MONEY BACK GUARANTEE
Every penny ef your money will be immediately refunded H you
are net 100% satisified with this premium preperty...this refund
OCTOBER 19, 1957
ARMY TIMES 18
Beach ‘Area
Florida Shores is located right on
U.S. Highway #1, the motor lifeline
of the State, just 300 yards from the
picturesque Indian River—and imme-
diate access to the Atlantic Ocean.
Fishing, bathing, hunting, boating
and gardening are all year-round
activities at Florida Shores!
THE SAME LOW, LOW PRICE...
just $495 per 40’x 125’ lot. Minimum
purchase i¢ 2 lots, but if you want
even more space to enjoy Florida liv-
ing, you can buy 3 or a maximum of
4 lots. The down payment is just $10
for each 40’x125’ lot, and $10 a
month. But it only takes $5 per lot
te start your purchase today!
ANNOUNCEMENT OF
PRICE INCREASE
Effective December 15, 1957, prices of
ali lets at FLORIDA SHORES will
increase $50. With more than 9,000
lots already sold and 75% of the read
building and development completed,
this property continues te increase in
valve. SAVE $100 today by reserving
your twe lots,
STARTS PURCHASE...
OF your own 4 ACRE
CITY LIVING WITH
_A SUBURBAN FLAIR
Police and Fire Protection
Garbage Collection
Model Homes and Builders
Homes already built
and occupied
@ Hectricity on the property
Schools, Churches, Shopping,
right in ety
Homestead Tax Exemption
Ne State income Tax
Sensible buliding restrictions
Free Title inevrance
Mere than 35 miles of streets
paved with Fleride style
compacted coquina
@ Paim lined main boulevard
@ Complete Drainage Control
System
@ Waterfront Park on intreceastel
Waterway
@ 160 foot Fishing and Boating
Pier en Indian River
@ Free Tevrnament-size Shuftie-
board Courts
Recreation and social activitios
at Edgewater Community Centre
Beautiful lakes on the property
FLORIDA SHORES, New Smyrna Beach |! , Florida
is good fer 60 days (2 months) after you send your reservation
coupon, You take neo risk but yeu get an excellent homesite
lecation by acting today!
~~
3 A Development by Hoawa svoaes Rarvesnces
0 Mew Smyrna Beech Chamber of Commores,
,
° B Bont of Mow beyrne book
Mow Smyma Beach, Morice
BD Bette Businers Oivemam,
- Mem Dade Chamber of Commerce,
inom, Por che
? 4. Usted by Dun & Brodetvest, Miend, Resite
FLORIDA SHORES
NEW SMYRNA BEACH FLORIDA
—
Please assign fo my name the number of lots | have checked below, and for which
t enclose a deposit of $5 for each lot. Please send me zoning chart showing clearly
the location of my lots, subject te my approval, exchange, or refund of deposit.
AE Reka so 120 RA Bhp pe 160’
2 LONS AT $495 - 3 LOTS AT $495 ; r 4 LOTS AT $495 - ; Ta
neGan 40° | 40 eerosit 40) 40) 407) ~ 49°} 40'| 407] 40 .
$10 2 $15 4 $20 2MOUSES =| 4
PUA PCE PULL PRICE PULL PRICE PERWES SHOLE
$ove $1,405 $1,990 ca io
0 O 0
(Please print name lor names) exactly as # shovld appear on contr oct}
ER AIO St eee
UM BUULDING PLOT IS 2 LOTS. ALL LOTS SAME PRICE, $495
60-DAY MONEY BACK GUARANTEE AFTER MAILING THIS COUPON
14° ARMY TIMES
OCTOBER 19, 1957
ORDERS
| TRANSFERS ZI |
SOs 190-94
ADJUTANT GENERAL’S
CORPS
Huntsinger 24 Lt W R, Walter Reed AMC,
from DC
m
Strickler 24 Lt W H, Tag Sch, Ft Harrison
Ind from Ft Harrison
Casebolt 24 Lt N W, Hq 4 Inf Diy, Ft
Lewis Wash from Ft Harrison
Jurist 24 Lt R G, USA Pers Cen, Ft
Hamilton NY from Ft Harrison
Kammer 24 Lt K P Jr, Ha & Haq Co, Ft
Hood Tex from Ft Harrison
Keegan 24 Lt M F, Hq 1 Armd Diy, Ft
Polk La from Ft Harrison
Kiddoo 2d Lt C H Jr, USA Pers Cen 6031,
Ft Lawton Wash from Ft Harrison
Powers 24 Lt W M E Jr, USA Engr Cen,
Ft Belvoir Va from Ft Harrison
r 24 Lt M 8S, Ha USATC Engr, Ft
Ft
Tap
ood Mo from Ft Harrison
Zeitzeff 24 Lt R M, Hq USS3C Inf,
Dix NJ from Ft Harriso
Hawkins CWO2 C A, AD Sch, Ft Bliss Tex
from Ft Bliss
Muller CWO3 M E F Jr, Air Def’ Sch, Ft
Bliss Tex from Ft Totten
Matlavage CWO3 M W, 2 Armd Cay Regt,
Ft Meade Md from Ft Knox
ARMOR
Worrall LCol W E, Trans Term Comd, Ft
Mason Calif from DC
Miles LCol R F, Dy Sta, Ft Ord Cali¥
from Ft Riley
Daulton Maj J O, 2 Armd Div, Ft Hood
Tex from Ft Polk
Lawrence Maj M M, 2 Rrmd Div, Ft Hood
Tex from Ft Polk
Gresick Maj B A, USA Gar 2101, Ft Meade
Md from Ft Polk
Anderson Maj Z L, ADGRU, Fit Snelling
Minn from DC
Walls Capt J B, 6 Armd Cav Regt, Ft Knox
Ky from Ft Polk
Kelley Capt W J, 4 Inf Div, Ft Lewis
Wash from Ft Polk
Harrer ist Lt L J, 6 Armd Cav Reg, Ft
Knox Ky from DC
Joanou 2d Lt P, USATC AAA, Ft Bliss
Tex from Ft Knox
Good 2d Lt L L, USATC AAA, Ft Bliss Tex
from Ft Knox
Jackson 24d Lt R F Jr, USATC AAA, Ft
Bliss Tex from Ft Knox
Johnson 2d Lt W J, USATC AAA, Ft Bliss
Tex from Ft Knox
Kilgo 24d Lt W M, USATC AAA, Ft Bliss
Tex from Ft Knox
McCasland 24d Lt W R, USATC AAA, Ft
Bliss Tex from Ft Knox
Moran 2d Lt J T, USATC AAA, Ft Blise
Tex from Ft Knox
Overcast 2d Lt L D,
Tex from Ft Knox
Pitt 2d Lt D, USATC AAA, Ft Bliss Tex
from Ft Knox
Roberson 2d Lt G W,
Tex from Ft Knox
USATC AAA, Ft Bliss
USATC AAA, Ft Bliss
Seagroves 24d Lt J W, USATC AAA, Ft
Bliss Tex from Ft Knox
Steinman 2d Lt W P Jr, USATC AAA, Ft
Bliss Tex from Ft Knox
Stevens 2d Lt T G,
Tex from Ft Knox
Turner 2d Lt J R, USATC AAA, Fit Bliss
Tex from Ft Knox
USATC AAA, Ft Bliss
Wright 24 Lt C L Jr, USATC AAA, Ft
Bliss Tex from Ft Knox
Ruthven 2d Lt T D, USATC Inf, Ft Dix
NJ from Ft Knox
ARMY MEDICAL CORPS
Marshall Maj E M, AMSS BAMC, Ft Hous
ton Tex from El Paso
McVay ist Lt M R, USAH 3400, Ft Camp
bell Ky from Ft Houston
Jackson ist Lt D, Arty & Msi Cen, Ft Sill
Okla from Ft McPherson
McBratnie Maj E J, 29 Evac Hosp, Ft
Devens Mass from Ft Wood
Pelton Capt E M, USAH, Cp Hanford
Wash from Phoenixville
O’Brien Capt A E, AMSS BAMC, Ft
Houston Tex from Carlisie Bks
ARTILLERY
King Col D M, USA Gar 3420, Ft Bragg
NC from Ft Devens
Thiel Maj R L, Dy Sta, Colo Spgs Colo
from Lajunta, Colo
Lopez Capt J E, 3 Inf Div, Ft Benning Ga
from Ft Benning
Wickham Capt R E, Arty & Msl Cen,
Sill Okla from Ft Harrison
Crews ist Lt R A, Cp Gary
Hales a
McGraw ist Lt R M, 26 AAA Gp, Ft Law-
Ft
Tex from
ton Wash from Ft Bliss
Rice ist Lt R C, Arty & Msl Cen, Ft 8)
Okla from Ft Benning
Phillips ist Lt W R, Hq Fourth USA, Ft
Houston Tex from Ft Rucker
Thomas Ist Lt C R, 2 Armd Div, Ft Hood
Tex from Ft Rucker
Thrasher ist Lt C G Jr, 2 Armd Div, Ft
Hood Tex from Ft Rucker
Westfall Ist Lt W J, 2 Armd Div, Ft Hood
Tex from Ft Rucker
Wolf 2d Lt K E, 45 AAA Brig, Arlington
Ht Ill from Ft Bliss
Atkeson 2d Lt T L, 61 AAA Gp, Milwaukee
Wis from Ft Bliss
Bailey 2d Lt G C, 45 AAA Brig, Arling-
ton Ht Ill from Ft Bliss
Barufaldi 2d Lt D J, 15 AAA Gp, Ft Banks
Mass from Ft Bliss
Beal 2d Lt J L, 45 AAA Brig, Arlington
Ht Ill from Ft Bliss
Belkin 2d Lt M S, 15 AAA Gp, Ft Banks
Mass from Ft Bliss
Boches 2d Lt F M, 61 AAA Gp, Milwaukee
Wis from Ft Bliss
Cara 2d Lt J H, 52 AAA Brig, Ft Wads
worth NY from Ft Bliss
Cooley 2d Lt R C, 61 AAA Gp, Milwaukee
Wis from Ft Bliss
Dacey 2d Lt J ¢ 35 AAA Brig, Ft Meade
Md from Ft Bliss
Edens 2d Lt W D, 61 AAA Gy Milwaukee
Wis from Ft Bliss
Denave 2d Lt F G, 35 AAA Brig, Ft Meade
Md from Ft Bliss
Frantz 2d Lt R A, 35 AAA Brig, Ft Meade
Md from Ft Bliss
Ginter 2d Lt D L, 67 AAA Gp, Apco Ohic
from Ft Bliss
Guffin 2d Lt W S Jr, 52 AAA Brig, Staten
Island NY from Ft Bliss
Hays 2d Lt P A 35 AAA Brig, Ft Meade
Md from Ft Bliss
Marks 2d Lt R C, 45 AAA Brig, Arlington
Ht Ill from Ft Bliss
Miler 2d Lt E H, 61 AAA Gp, Milwaukee
Wis from Ft Bliss
Morgan 2d Lt J A, 52 AAA Brig, Staten
Island NY from Fit Bliss
Powers 2d Lt H G, 45 AAA Brig, Arlington
Ill from Ft Bliss
Rapp 2d Lt P K, 531 AAA Bn, Ellsworth
AFB &D from Fi Blise
|
|
Sanders 24 Lt T C, 531 AAA Bn, Ellsworth
AFB SD from Ft Bliss
Taylor 24 Lt R O, 2 AAA Gp, Ft Niagara
NY from Ft Bliss
Barge 24 Lt B L, Arty Msl
Okla from Ft Holabird
Kirkbride 24 Lt E E, USATC Armor,
Knox Ky from Ft Bliss
Agorastos 24d Lt E D, USATC Inf, Ft Ord
Calif from Ft Bliss
Arrigan 24 Lt R F, USATC Inf, Ft Dix
NJ from Ft Bliss
Blewer 2d Lt E L Jr, USATC FA, Ft Chaf-
fee Ark from Ft Bliss
Bonsignore 2d is D N, USATC Inf, Ft Dix
NJ from Ft Bliss
Bridge 24 Lt P H, USATC Armor, Ft Knox
Ky from Ft Bliss
Bright 24 Lt R L, USATC Armor, Ft Knox
Ky from Ft Bliss
Byrd 2d Lt T 8, USATC Engr, Ft Wood
Mo from Ft Bliss
Campion 24 Lt T F, USATC Inf, Ft Dix
NJ from Ft Bliss
Coe 24 Lt D K, USATC Armor, Ft Knox
Ky from Ft Bliss
Dito 2d Lt J A, USATC Inf, Ft Ord Calif
Cen, Ft Sill
Ft
from Ft Bliss
Ejlifritt 24 Lt D 8, USATC Armor, Ft Knox
Ky from Ft Bliss
Fiore 2d Lt J 1 Jr, USATC Inf, Ft Dix
NJ from Ft Bliss
Gagan 2d Lt J E, USATC Inf, Ft Dix NJ
from Ft Bliss
Goerisch 2d Lt N A, USATC Engr, Ft Wood
Mo from Ft Bliss
Goff 2d Lt M R, USATC FA, Ft Chaffee
Ark from Ft Bliss
Hart 2d Lt J, USATC FA, Ft. Chaffee
Ark from Ft Bliss
Jackson 2d Lt C C, USATC FA, Ft Chaffee
Ark from Ft Bliss
Jacobson 24 Lt B T, USATC Armor, Ft
Knox Ky from Ft Bliss
Johnson 2d Lt S G, USATC FA, Ft Chaffee
Ark from Ft Bliss
Jossart 2d Lt R E, USATC Engr, Ft Wood
Mo from Ft Bliss
Klingaman 2d Lt R M, USATC Inf, Ft Dix
NJ from Ft Bliss
Lapidus 2d Lt 8S, USATC Inf, Ft Dix
NJ from Ft we
Moliman 2d Lt A C, see Engr, Ft
Wood Mo nae Ft Bilis
Mulvey 2d Lt t Ts USATC Inf, Ft Dix N J
from Ft Bli
Paul 2d Lt A 4 USATC Armor, Ft Knox
Ky from Ft Bliss
Presley 2d Lt G D, USATC FA, Ft Chaf-
fee Ark from Ft Bliss
Richards 2d Lt G J Jr, USATC Inf, Ft Ord
Calif from Ft Bliss
Richey 2d Lt D J, USATC FA, Ft Chaffee
Ark from Ft Bliss
Sciaqua 2d Lt A G Jr, USATC Armor, Ft
Knox Ky from Ft Bliss
Schuster 2d Lt I N, USATC FA, Ft Chaf-
fee Ark from Ft Bliss
Segal 2d Lt M E, USATC Inf, Ft Dix NJ
from Ft Bliss
Sicking 2d Lt J J, USATC Armor, Ft Knox
Ky from Ft Bliss
Small 2d Lt P M,
Mo from Ft Bliss
Smith 2d Lt C G, USATC FA, Ft Chaffee
Ark from Ft Bliss
Smith 2d Lt E D, USATC Inf, Ft Ord Calif
G G,
from Ft Bliss
USATC Inf, Ft Ord
Calif from Ft Bliss
Sweany 2d Lt
Welch 2d Lt Q@ B, USATC FA, Ft Chaffee
Ark from Ft Bliss
Florence 2d Lt D L, 2 Armd Div, Ft Hood
Tex from Ft Rucker.
Meyers 2d Lt S E Jr, 2 Armd Div, Ft Hood
USATC Engr, Ft Wood
Tex from Ft Rucker
Alpaugh 2d Lt W H, USATC Armor, Ft
Knox Ky from Ft Sill
| Baker 2d Lt R C, USATC Armor, Ft Knox
Ky from Ft Sill
Barth 2d Lt H A Jr, USATC Inf, Ft Ord
Calif from Ft Sill
Bixler 2d Lt D R, USATC Engr, Ft Wood
Mo from Ft Sill
Burgedoetfer 24 Lt J J, USATC Armor, Ft
Knox Ky from Ft Sill
Cool 2d Lt J R, USATC Engr, Ft Wood
Mo from Ft Sill
Corn 2d Lt E G, USATC Engr, Ft Wood
Mo from Ft Sill
Devee 2d Lt J C, USATC Armor, Ft Knox
Ky from Ft Sill
Dickson 2d Lt J D Jr, USATC Armor, Ft
Knox Ky from Ft Sill
Fischer 2d Lt D E, USATC Engr, Ft Wood
Mo from Fit Sill
Forbes 2d Lt J C, USATC Engr, Ft Wood
K, | amas Armor, Ft
Mo from Ft Sill
Garland 2d Lt C
Knox Ky from Fi Sil
He SERVED WITH V
Waal aeron Duin Te 29 Byes
U.S, MILITARY AGADEMY DST.
orn DARTILLERY AS BATTERYO
ER ERAND Ih INSTRUCTOR,
~ CHAAMIAG HOODY CONSTRUETION
GEN HART BECAME ass'r
OF THE AAAS
LERY COMMANDER(!
Ft
Grizzard 24 Lt E M,
Ky from Ft Sill
Hamilton 24 Lt H R, USATC Inf, Ft Jack-
son S C from Ft Sill
USATC Armor,
Hodges 24 Lt J E, USATC Inf, Fi Ord
Calif from Ft Sill
Holliday 24 Lt H N, ateiaies FA, Ft
Chafee Ark from Ft Si)
Hornaday 2d Lt R M, USATC Armor, Ft
Knox Ky from Ft Sill
Howard 2d Lt H U, USATC Engr, Ft Wood
Mo from Ft Sill
Jordanoff 24 Lt N, USATC Armor, Ft Knox
Ky from Ft Sill
Knapp 2d Lt T ahs USATC Engr, Ft Wood
Mo from Ft §
Knezevich 2d ue D> E, USATC Armor, Ft
Knox Ky from Ft Sill
Magliocoo 24 Lt H -. USATC Armor, Ft
Knox Ky from Ft §
Matthias 24 Lt R H ar, USATC Armor, Ft
Knox Ky from Ft Sill
Nakama 24 Lt K K, USATC Inf, Fit Ord
Calif from Ft Sill
A G, USATC Inf, Ft Jackson
S C from Ft Sill
Phelps 24 Lt W C, USATC Engr, Fit Wood
o from Ft Sill
Raabe 24 Lt R W Jr, Ft
Knox Ky from Ft Sill
Sims 2d Lt D L, USATC Armor, Ft Knox
Ky from Ft Sill
Sloane 2d Lit T L,
Knox Ky from Ft $i)
Starnes 24d Lt J W,
Knox Ky from Ft Sill
Tribby 24d Lt W L, USATC Armor,
Knox Ky from Ft Sill
Weigel 24d Lt H D, USATC Engr, Ft Wood
Mo from Ft Sill
USATC Armer,
USATC Armor, Fit
USATC Armor, Ft
Ft
Weller 2d Lt J L Jr, USATC Armor, Fit
Knox Ky from Ft Sill
Blomquist 2d Lt A T, USATC Inf, Ft Dix
N J from Ft Sill
Boocock 2d Lt R B, USATC Inf, Ft Dix
N J from Ft Sill
Cabina 24 Lt R J, USATC Inf, Ft Dix
N J from Ft Sill
Cameron 24 Lt D F, USATC Inf, Ft Dix
N J from Ft Sill
Garrett 24d Lt R E, USATC Inf, Ft Dix
N from Ft Sill
Hall 24 Lt D L, USATC Inf, Ft Dix
* N J from Ft Sill
Hansen 2d Lt F J, USATC Inf, Ft Dix
N J from Ft
Jones 2d Lt I F, USATC Inf, Ft Dix
N J from Ft §
Kelley 2d L M, USATC Inf, Ft Dix
J from Ft Sil
Kolachov 24 Lt 8 P, USATC Inf, Ft Dix
N J from Ft Sill
Kolinsky 2d Lt K, USATC Inf, Ft Dix
N J from Ft Si
Lewis 24 Lt J W, USATC Inf, Ft Dix
N J from Ft Sill
Martin 24 Lt R D, USATC Inf, Ft Dix
N J from Ft Sill
McGowan 2d Lt F P, USATC Inf, ‘Ft Dix
N J from Ft Sill
Morrison 2d Lt R E, USATC Inf, Ft Dix
N J from Ft Sill
OHara 2d Lt F G Jr, USATC Inf, Ft Dix
N J from Ft Sill
Weaver 2d Lt D &, USATC Inf, Fit Dix
N J from Ft Sill
Weinstein 2d Lt L B, USATC Inf, Fi Dix
N J from Ft Sill
Cox CWO2 H S, Dy Sta, Huntsville Ala
from Ft Sill
28 AAA Gp, Selfridge
Copp CWO2 C w,
AFB Mo from Ft Bliss
Kyle CWO2 A E, 35 AAA Brig, Fit Meade
Md from Ft Bliss
Huff CWO3 R P, 63 AAA Gp,
Conn from Ft Bliss
Gallagher CWO3 L A, 45 AAA Brig, Arling-
ton Heights Ill from Ft Bliss
Burr WOl R A, Hq 30 AAA Gp, Ft Barry
Calif from Ft Bliss
Leal WOl E, 531 AAA Bn, Ellsworth ag
S D from Ft Bliss
CORPS OF ENGINEERS —
Henderson Col F R, USA Gar 6006 01, Ft
Lewis Wash from New York
Tarrant Capt H G, Intel Gen, Ft Holabird
Md from Ft Bragg
Anderson 24 Lt G W, Cp Gary Tex from
Ft Belvoir
Houston 2d Lt J B Jr, Cp Gary Tex from
Ft Polk
Johnston 24 Lt W L, USATC Engr, Ft
Wood Mo from Ft Belvoir
Aberle 2d Lt R H, USATC Engr, Ft Wood
Mo from Ft Belvoir
Bimshas 2d Lt J Jr, 20 Engr Bn, Fi Devens
Mass from Ft Belvoir
Burgman 2d Lt J A, 86 Engr Bn, Fi Dix
Mi Dix
New Britain
N J from Ft Belvoir
Coleman 2d Lt R S, 86 Engr Bn,
N J from Ft Belvoir
CENTER, FT BLIGG;TEX.
GEPT ‘4B, WAS ASGIGNED TO THE 19T Vv
INFANTRY DIV. IN GERMANY ASARTIL~ .OF THE
| Bernier Col D W, Ha MDW, D C from Ft
H
WHICH HE
TUNIGIAN AND THE ENTIRE
SICILIAN CAMPAIGN.
6
Fiedler 24 Lt EB F, USATC Engr, Ft Wood
Mo from Ft Belvoir
Freeman 24 Lt W W, 20 Engr Bn, Ft
Devens Mass from Ft Belvoir
Gavrel 24 Lt C BA Engr Gp, Ft Hood
Benning Ga from Ft
Kennedy 2d Lt D F, USATC Engr, Ft Wood
Tex from Ft Vv
Gillessie 24 Lt C D, 151 Engr Gp, Ft
Vv
Jurgelewioz 24 3, 20 Engr Bn, Ft
Bevens Mass from Be
Mo from Ft Belvoir
baa toy, ny Lt J F, USATC Engr, Ft Wood
Mo m Ft Belvoir
Steinbruegge 24 Lt H A, USATC Engr, Ft
ivoir
Woehrle 2d Lt A H Jr, 86 Engr Bn, Ft Dix
N J from Belvoir
Villa 24 Lt E R, 3 Inf Div, ¥t Benning Ga
from Ft Belvoir
Eberline 24 Lt R F, pease Engr, Ft Wood
Mo from Ft Belvo’
Haber 24 Lt R H, ior Engr Gp, Ft Benning
Ga from Ft Belvoir
ir
Russell 2d Lt H C, 86 Engr Bn, Ft Dix N J
from Ft Belvoir
Speer 2d Lt P R, vw Engr Gp, Ft Campbell
Ky from Ft Belvol
Wiemken 24 Lt C "Yr, USATC Engr, Ft
Wood Mo from Ft Belvoir
INFANTRY
USA Exhimit Unit, D C
Jacobs Maj C E, Hq XXI Vorps, Indian-
town Gap Pa from Holabird
Allen Capt J W Jr, 1 Battle Gp, Ft Riley
Kens from Ft Benning
Cleere Capt 3 R, 2 Battle Gp, Ft Riley
Kans from Ft Benning
Scholly Capt W C, 519 MI Bn, Ft Bragg N C
Ben
Blumhardt Capt H J, Bat Gp, Ft Riley
Kans from Ft Ben
1 Bat Gp, Ft Riley
Kans from
Gilbert Capt J M, 5 — Co, Ft Camp-
Keesling Ca Le Tre Admin Co, Ft
Ky from Benn:
8 C from Ft Benning
Butler Capt J R, 101 Admin Co, Ft Camp-
ng
om —— 3 P, 101 ‘Admin: Co, Ft Campbell
Benning
Curis: Capt R R, = Inf Cen, Ft Benning
s
David Capt E G Jr, 9 Inf Div, Ft Carson
Colo from Ft Benning
Ga from Ft Benning
Dodge ons E, USA Inf Cen, Ft Benning
Be
ayes
Miles Maj J &,
from D C
from Pres Mon
E, 1 Bat Gp, Ft Riley
Coatney Capt L C,
Ben
bell Ky from Ft Be:
ing
Steel Capt J H, USATC Inf, Ft Jackson
bell Ky from Ft Benni
Ga from Ft Be
Deuel Capt O H, Ha ‘Third USA, Ft Gorden
Ga from
Downes Capt M H, 3 Inf Div, Ft Benning
a from ing
Escribano Aponte —. USATC Inf, Ft Dix
N J from Ft Benn
Capt J > USA ae Sch, Ft
Rucker Ala from Ft Benn
Hooks Capt W G, 101 ‘Admin ¢ Co, Ft Camp-
bell Ky frmo Ft Benning
Hoyle Capt J K Jr, USA Inf Cen, Ft Ben-
ning Ga from Ft Ben: Benning
Lunsford Capt P R, USA Inf Cen, Ft Ben-
ning Ga from Ft Benning
Lillard Capt J A, 101 Admin Co, Ft Camp-
bell Ky from Ft Benning
Overby Capt L M, USA Inf Cen, Ft Benning
Ga from Ft Benning
Ray Capt J O, Hq Fifth USA, Chicago Il
from Ft Benning
Reeves Capt J N, 9 Inf Div, Ft Carson Colo
from Ft Benning
Capt J M, USA Avyn &ch, Ft
Rucker Ala from Ft Benning
Snyder Capt P _s a — Sch, Ft Rucker
Ala from Ft Be
Steele Capt H M 5 r Bat Gp, Ft Myer Va
from Ft Benning
Wood Capt D M, mot Admin Co, Ft Camp-
bell Ky from Ft Benning
Breen Capt T A, Stu Det USALS, Pres
Mont Calif from Ft Benn ning
Cummings Capt EL, Stu Oet USALS, Pres
Mont Calif from Ft Ben
Btonecipher Capt R G, Stu Det USALS, Pres
Ment Calif from
Thompson Capt R I, Stu Det USALS, Pres
Mont Calif Ft
Redmond Capt D G, 101 Admin Co, Ft
Campbell Ky from Ft Benning
a
:
7
fH
gilt
Ee i
deen Md from
Green WOl M; 197 Ord Det, ‘Alameda Calif
from Huntsville
QUARTERMASTER CORPS
Weaver Col J 0, OCINFO, D C from D C
Bergsagel Maj R M, QM Tng Comd, Ft Lee
Va from
Luetge Ist Lt A E, QM Subs Sch, Chicago
Ft Hood
C A Jr, QM Tng Comd, Ft
from Ft Benning
Kurgvel 24 Lt J, — & Mel Seh, Fi Sil
Okla from Ft &
SIGNAL. CORPS
Fischer La | L J, Hq USASA, Arlington Va
from D
Dahiby ist Lt R L, USASA Trp Comd, Ft
leade from
ens
x Hq 6 Regn, Fi Baker
alif from Van Nuys
Sleeper 4 Lt J y Det peat. Ft
Benning Ga from Ft Campbell
Smith 5 if M D, ‘Trans Rech Engr, Ft
Eustis rom Long
Davis 24 %.¢ CR, News Cen, Kansas City
Island
G L, 579 Sig Co, Toby-
from Ft Monmouth
Buckley 24 Lt G M, USA Elet Pr Gr, Ft
Huachuca Ariz from Ft Monmouth
Beck lt Eict Pr Gr 9470, Ft
Huachuca Ariz from Ft Monmouth
Gose 2d Lt J R Jr, Elet Pr Gr 9470, Ft
Huachuca Ariz from Ft Monmouth
io 24 Lt T J, Blect Pr Gr 9470, Ft
uachuce Ariz from Ft Monmouth
Mason 24 Lt T R, Elect Pr Gr 9470, Ft
Huachuca Ariz from Ft Monmouth
Raftery 24 Lt M R, Elct Pr Gr 9470, Ft
Huachuca Aris from Ft Monmouth
heeler 24 Lt I N, Elet Pr Gr 9470, Ft
Huachuca Aris from Ft Monmouth
Williams 24 Lt T R, Elet Pr Gr 9470, Ft
Huachuca Ariz from Ft Monmouth
Drake 2d Lt L C, 267 Sig Co, Ft Riley
a mouth
Hobby 24 Lt K G, 40 Sig Bn, Ft Devens
ass from Ft Monmouth
Livesay 24:'Lt B R, Hq USA Sig Gar, Ft
Monmouth N J _— Ft Monmouth
mooi 24 Lt J C Jr, 40 Sig Bn, Ft Devens
ass from Ft Monmouth
Ratirey td Lt K D, 501 Sig Co, Ft Devens
rom Ft Monmouth
Riggins ia’. Lt R E, 34 Sig Co, Ft Hood Tex
m Ft Monmouth
Sanott 24 } Fang 908 Sig Co, Fit Wadsworth
Monmouth
PR iPS 24 - R J, Hq USA Sig Gar, Ft
Monmouth N J from Ft Monmouth
Turner 24 Lt T F Jr, 578 Sig Co, Fi Meade
Md from Ft Monméuth
bi = CWO2 D, Elet Pr Gr, Ft Huachuca
A inchester
TRANSPORTATION CORPS
Davis LCol D M, OC of T, D C from D C
Jordan LCol G A, Trans Intel Agcy, D C
from D C
Sharpe LCol H p Lang Sch, Pres. Mont
Calif from Ft Gordon
Chadwell Maj R C, Trans Term Comd, Ft
Mason Calif from Seattle
Sullivan Capt H_ C, 2d Armd Div, Fit Hood
Tex from Ft Eustis
a Capt A W, Trans Tng Comd, Ft
satis Va from Fit Rucker
Billy Ist Lt M D, Trans Tng Comd, Ft
Eustis Va from Ft Rucker
Dunagan ist Lt C M, Trans Tng Comd, Ft
Eustis Va from Ft Rucker
MeGee Ist Lt B A Jr, Trans Tng Comd, Ft
Eustis Va from Ft Rucker
McClintock Ist Lt A B, USA’ Trans Sch,
Ft Eustis Va from Ft Eustis
Carter Ist Lt R O, Trans Sch, Ft Eustis Va
from Ft Eustis
Ankenbrandt ist Lt W R, Trans Tng
Ft Eustis Va from Ft Rucker
Hannum ist Lt A G, Trans Tog
Ft Eustis Va from Ft Rucker
Engel ist lt ER Trans Tong
Ft Eustis Va from Ft Rucker
Monastra 24 Lt C J, Trans Term
alif from Seattle
Comd,
Comd,
Comé,
Comd,
Comd,
Comd,
Comd,
Comd,
Comd,
Coma,
Mason Calif from Seattle
Alexander 34 Lt F R, Trans Term
Ft Mason Calif from Seattle
Klaber 2d Lt BR D, Trans Term
Ft Mason Calif from Seattle
Carroll Capt D A, 101 Admin Co, Ft Camp-
li Ky from Ft Benning
(Continued on Page 16)
1a,
LT. GEN, Lemuel Mathewson,
new commander of Sixth Army
at San Francisco, has been
named military aide to Queen
Elizabeth 1 during her visit
this week.
Latest Army
Publications
WASHINGTON—The Army has
recently distributed the following
unclassified publications.
Regulations
AR 95-67—19 Sept. Detailed instructions
for the Army aviation instrument program,
and conduct of written exams.
R —26 Sept. Prescribes mini-
mum safety precautions to be observed
during handling, storage and transporta-
tion of radioactive source set, M3.
Changes to Regulations
AR 600-299, C 7—28 Aug. Minor pass
port changes on special provisions for per-
sonnel traveling overseas on TD; also lists
sample passport authorization letter for
dependents.
AR 612-50, C 3—30 Sept. Provisions of
AR 614-39 apply to EM returning from
overseas with 90 days or less service prior
to ETS; also states, that E Mwhese over-
seas tour expires 91 or 180 days,-will be
retained until individual’s teur in States
will be maximum of 90 days prior te ETS.
Circulars
Cie 35-31—27 Sept. Expenditure of edu-
eation of dependents funds. Lists Army
Secretary findings of lecalities unable to
adequately provide education for minor
dependents.
Cir 55-6—26 Sept.—Notice of continua-
tion of reduced fare policy uatil 30 June
1958 while traveling in uniform on leave
or pass. Also cautions against misuse of
privilege.
Cir 60-9—30 Sept. Assignment of relief
ef exchange officers.
Cir 14566—26 Sept. Issuance of DA
1958 and mandatery after this dat
Changes to Circulars
Cie 601-6, C 3-23 Sept. Miner change
in medical exam precedure for appoint-
ment of outstanding specialists as RA
commissioned officers.
Cir 524-10, C 2—Announces 15 Oct. 1957
as convening date of selection boards for
officers eligible for consideration for tem-
perary promotion to grade of major.
TOEs
TOE 10-187D—2t Aug. Modernizes QM
Salvage Co.
Pamphlets
Pam 310-7—Sept. Index of TOE, TO type
TD, and TA.
Changes to Pamphlets
Pam 310-23, C 1—2) Sept. Changes to
index ef chemical corps supply manuals.
Pennsylvania Bonus
Deadline Extended
HARRISBURG, Pa. — The Penn-
sylvania Dept. of Military Affairs
hag announced that the deadline
for applications for the state War
II bonus has been extended.
Veterans who have not previous-
ly applied may obtain applications
by writing to Russell Johns, Super-
visor, Pennsylvania World War II
Veterans’ Compensation Bureau,
risburg, Pa.
Room 207, South Office Bidg., Har-
co
a
‘must be securely packed in car-
tons of wood, metal or double faced
rrugated fiberboard. Articles of
fragile nature must be sur-
rounded by at least two inches of
> tightly packed cushioning material
shipment | such ag shredded paper.
OCTOBER 19, 1957
ARMY TIMES 15
100 inches In total length and
girth. Weight limitations are 50
pounds to APOs or FPOs in Great
Britain, and 70 pounds to other
points.
Christmas Mailing Period Set for Troops Overseas
The size of parcels is limited to
Cigarets, tobacco and coffee may
not be sent to some overseas areas,
and matches, lighter fluid, and in-
flammable items are prohibited.
Mailers should
local post office for complete mail-
ing information.
consult their
IMinois
Missourl
Colorade
Arizona
Mr, 8. N. Multin
Gulf Oii Corp.
200 N. Mich. Ave,
Chicago 1, tt.
PICK THE STATE where you wish to run a Gulf service station.
You can be your own boss in a modern, well-
designed Gulf station in a busy location in
your choice of any one of 33 states.
You sell the finest line of products in the
entire petroleum industry and you have the
best in advertising, merchandising and sales
promotion programs to help you sell them.
You have a first-rate income opportunity
as a Gulf dealer. Service station operators
are making good money today and our dealers
Be your own boss,
live where you. choose...
running a business like this!
WHEN YOU LEAVE THE SERVICE, which will you be? The man who
does a routine job earning a routine wage? Or your own boss, using your
energies to increase your earnings? Here’s your opportunity to run a business
of your own, operating a Gulf service station.
are doing especially well everywhere.
If you’re the right man for the business,
Gulf will gladly help you become established.
And Gulf provides the training program to
make sure you’re a capable service station
operator by the time you start.
Act now! Get started on a permanent, prof-
itable career running a business of your own.
Mail the coupon on this page today. You'll
be glad you did!
MAIL THE COUPON to the Division Manager as listed below.
Maine
New Hampshire
Vermont
Massachusetts
Rhode Island
Mr. D. R. Ferris
Gulf Oi Corp.
Park Square Bidg.
Boston 17, Mass.
By return mail, please send me
further information on my op-
portunities as a Gulf dealer.
New York
Connecticut
New Jersey
Mr. E. W. Emerson
Gulf Oil Corp.
17 Battery Place
New York 4, N.Y.
Pennsylvania
W. Virginis, Virginia
Delaware
Maryland
District of Columbia
Mr. W. D. Nelson
Gulf Oil Corp.
?.0. Box 8056
Philadelphia 1, Pa.
Name
Ohio
Kentucky
Indiana
Michigan
Mr. W. A. Bourne
Gulf Ol Corp.
National Bank Bidg.
Toledo 1, Ohie
North Carolina
South Carolina
Georgia
Florida
Mr. G. E. Millican
Gulf Oil Corp
131 Ponce de Leon Ave
Atianta 1, Ga
Gulf Oil
Corporation
Tennessee
Alabama
Mississipp
Louisiana
Arkansas
Mr. C. B. Prescott
Gulf Oil Corp
127 Etk Place
New Orleans 12, La
Texas
Oklahoma
New Mexico
Mr. M. Farnsworth
Gulf Oil Corp
Gulf Busiding
Houston 1, Tex.
Service address
Estimated separation date
My choice of location
in or near
STATE
Town
16 ARMY TIMES
OCTOBER 19, 1957
ORDERS
(Continued from Page 14)
Reimsnyder 24 Lt R } AL. Trans Term Comd,
Ft Mason Calif from Seattle
Veelker 24 Lt D
Mason Calif
Witters 24 Lt F H Jr, Trans Term Comd,
Ft Mason Calif from Seattle
Bugenske 24 Lt J G, Trans Tng Comd,
Eustis Va from Ft Rucker
Kauchak 24 Lt W E, USA Gar 1206, Ft
Wadsworth N Y from Ft Rucker
WOMEN’S ARMY CORPS
Gen Ae Coll, Ft
VETERINARY CORPS
Benson Sout J H, 6th Med Lab, Seattle
Wash from Ft Lewis
Yost Capt I D DH, Med Rech Lab, Ft Knox Ky
from Cml Cen Md
Brandt 2d . 1 W, USATC Inf, Ft Ord Calif
from Ft Knox
Dospan 24 Lt Ps, waave Inf, Ft Ord
Calif from Ft Kno
McInnis 24 Lt G@ . “UBATC Inf, Ft Ord
Calif from Ft Kno
— Ly PC ore USATC Inf, Ft Ord
Ft Knox
Schwa 24 Lt A unde USATC Inf, Ft Ord
Ca from Ft K
TRANSFERS
OVERSEAS
ADJUTANT GENERAL CORPS
Browning Maj a F, OC of 8 USA, D C to
Bangkok Thail
Mil Dist, Pres San
R
T, Trans Term Comd,
Davies CWO2 R P, Hi
Francisco Calif to USAREU
Suders CWO2 H L, AMSS BAMC, Ft
Houston Tex to USAREUR
Deskiewieze CWO2 T M, Ha
Aberdeen PG Md te USARPAC
Barnak CWO2 F J, 572 Army Postal 4N,
Ft Carson Colo to USAREUR
Brantley CWO2 J W, Sve Biry 1 How Bn,
Ft Riley Kane to USAREUR
Daines CWO2 D A, 269 FA Bn, Ft Carson
Colo to USAREUR
Goodrich CWO2 G A, Hq Sixth USA, Pres
San Francisco Calif to USAREUR
Hendrix CWO2 J S, Hq Second USA, Ft
Meade Md te USAREUR
Moore CWO3 R E, 1 AA Reg Comd, Ft
Totten N Y te USAREUR
Ross CWO3 J P, 617 FA Obsr,
te USAREUR
Croucher CWO3 M E, Hq USATC,
Calif to USAREUR
Roper CWO3 D W, Ha USAR Comd, Ft Me-
Pherson Ga to USAREUR
Tessier CWO4 H A, Ha & Ha Co, Ft Eustis
Va to USAREUR
Serafin WOl E J, 97 Army Band, Ft Sill
Okla to USAREUR
ARMOR
Miller Capt J B, ADGRU,
Teheran fran
Richardson Capt W A, Hq US ASA, Arling-
ton Va to Korea
ARMY NURSE CORPS
Haath Maj B Pe Ireland AH, Ft Knox Ky
to USARPA
Schuchmann Mad A E, AH Dee Ft Leaven-
worth Kans to USARPA
Dorenkemper Maj D G,
Wood Mo to USAREUR
Hayworth Maj H G, USAH 3420, Ft Bragg
N C to USAREUR
Henley Maj N L, BAMC 9940, Ft Houston
Tex to USAREUR
Ft Sill Okla
Ft Ord
Canton Ohio to
USAH 5017, Ft
Kimmet Maj M, Letterman AH, Pres San
Francisco Calif to USAREUR
Sorini Maj C R, AH 6017, Cp Hanford
Wash to Oahu Thail
Baggett Capt Z B, Fitzsimons AH, Denver
Colo to USARPAC
Henning Capt A E, AH 4008, Cp Wolters
Tex to USARPAC
Kennedy Capt R P, Army Navy Hosp, Hot
Springs Ark to USARPAC
Lee Capt E E, AH 6513, Ft
Calif to USARPAC
Lothian Capt E E,
USARPAC
Peterson Capt L P, AH 2164 01,
Va te USARPAC
Stivien Capt S M, AH 3431,
to USARPAC
Thorpe cant E, BAMC, Ft Houston Tex to
USARPA
Wolsard Capt E vs AH 1170, Ft Devens
Mass to USARPA
Veik Capt I L,
to USARPAC
Hartmann Capt C A, Fitzsimons AH, Den-
ver Cole to USAREUR
Rodgers Capt M L, Madigan AH,
Wash to USAREUR
MacArthur
WRAMC, D C to
Ft Eustis
Fit Jackson 8 C
ae AH, El Paso Tex
Tacoma
Bailey Capt L I, USAH 3431, Ft Jackson $C
to USAREUR
Bowman Capt G M, USAH 8660, West
Point N Y to USAREUR
Cocke Capt M, USAH 2164 01, Ft Eustis Va
to USAREUR
Everett Capt A E, BAMC 9940, Ft Houston
Tex to USAREUR
Gibson Capt M A, USAH 5022, Ft Carson
Colo to USAREUR
Greene Capt I E, Madigan AH, Tacoma
Wash to' USAREUR
Jones Capt H M, Ireland AH, Ft Knox Ky
to USAREUR
Labuda Capt M E,
Ga to USAREUR
Looper Capt F L, USAH 4002, Ft Chaffee
Ark to USAREUR
Martin Capt L H,
Calif to USAREUR
Minter Capt M L, BAMC 9940, Ft Houston
Tex to USAREUR
Nelson Capt D I, USAH 4005, Ft Hood Tex
to USAREUR
Robinette Capt A I,
Wash to USAREUR
Scheel Capt C M, Beaumont AH, El Paso
Tex to USAREUR
Shade Capt V R, USAH 5016, Ft Crowder
Mo to USAREUR
USAH 3441, Ft Gordon
USAH 6019, Cp Irwin
Madigan AH, Tacoma
Sharon Capt M, USAH 3400, Ft Campbell
Ky to USAREUR
Shor Capt E E, WRAMC, D C to USAREUR
Smyth Capt A M, BAMC, Ft Houston Tex
to USAREUR
Witt Capt L C, WRAMC, D C to USAREUR
Wright Capt E, BAMC, Ft Houston Tex
to USAREUR
Clark Capt M D, Fitzsimons AH, Denver
Cole to Oahu Thail
Edson Capt M L,
to Oahu Thail
Reinhardt Capt E A, AH 6017, Cp Hanford
Wash to USAREUR
Steimle Capt M L, USAH 58017, Ft Wood
Mo te USAREUR
Suders Capt. M.A, AMSS BAMC, Ft Hous-
ton Tex to USAREUR
AH 5027, Ft Harrison Ind
PAST IN REVIEW
“Well, we almost had an air force.”
Battle Ist Lt C G, DeWitt AH, Ft Belvoir
Va to USARPAC
Cote ist Lt J C, AH 3440, Ft B ing Ga
Benton ist Lt J W, USATC Arty, Ft Bliss
eX to USARPA Cc
lst Lt 8S A, USA Gar, Ft Dev-
te USARPAC
Baginski ist Lt L E, Ireland AH, Ft Knox
Ky to USARE
Bennett ist Lt R F, BAMC 9940, Ft Hous-
ton Tex to USAREUR
Collins ist Lt D F, USAH 4002, Ft Chaffee
Ark to USAREUR
Glisson ist Lt B R, USAH 4002, Ft Chaffee
Ark to USAREUR
Pica Ist Lt A, Letterman AH, Pres & F
Calif to USAREUR
Pritchard Ist Lt M L, AMSS BAMC, Ft
Houston Tex to USAREUR
Sloan ist Lt L C, Valley Forge AH,
Phoenixville Pa to USAREUR
Ware ist Lt J M, USAH 3442, Ft McPher-
son Ga to USAREUR
Zane ist Lt A F Y, Letterman AH, Pres
S F Calif % USAREUR
Zane Ist Lt L E K, Letterman AH, Pres
S F Calif to a
Alford ist Lt M, AH 3420, Ft Bragg
N C to Oahu rH
Jablon ist Lt J, BAMC 9940, Ft Houston
Tex to USAREUR
Johnston Ist Lt S C, Valley Forge AH,
Phoenixville Pa to USAREUR
Pelkey Ist Lt D F, AH 5022, Ft Carson Colo
to USAREUR
Flournoy 2d Lt M A,
S F Calif to USAREUR
Richardson 2d Lt B L; WRAMC, D € te
REUR
USA
ARTILLERY
Meeker LCol R J, 49 AAA Msl Bn, Skokie
Ill to USAREUR
E F, Army Council RESW,
EUR
Lacey LCol P J Jr, USALS, Pres Mont
Calif to Laos
Spengler LCol J T H, Lang Sch, Pres Mont
Calif to Ethiopia
Douglas LCol B, Hq US Aradcom, Ent
AFB Colo to Paris France
Ryon Maj J C, Hq Fourth USA, Ft Hous-
ton Tex to Saudi Arabia
Cover Maj W W, Lang Sch, Pres Mont
Calif to Syria
dC
Warren Maj J R,
to Frankfurt
Faulhaber Capt G Sa USALS,. Pres Mont
Calif to USAREU
Northrip Capt D i USAAMS, Ft Sill Okla
to USAREUR
Becker Ist Lt M L,
Tex to USAREUR
Condry ist Lt W J. 59 AAA Bn, Ft Bliss
Tex to USAREU
Walsh ist Lt G P, 48 FA Bn, Ft Sill Okla
to USAREUR
Waites CWO2 J C, 70 AAA Bn, Hyattsville
Md to Greenland
CORPS OF ENGINEERS
Ledbetter LCol W R, Stu Det USALS, Pres
Mont Calif to Teheran Iran
McCoach LCol J R, Elct Pr Gr, Ft Hua-
chuca Ariz to USARPAC
Feld Maj M, Dugway Utah to USARPAC
Quff Maj J P, Engr Cen 9829, Ft Belvoir
Va to USARPAC
Smith Capt M G, 4 Engr Bn, Ft Lewis Wash
to USARPAC
Balerviez Capt M P,
City Ill to USARPA
Barton ist Lt R H = Stu Det USALS,
Pres Mont Calif to USAREUR
Kim CWO2 P M H, Engr Cen,
Va to Oahu TH
Baricuatro CWO2 Z C,
Va to Schofid Bks
CHAPLAINS
Jewell Maj F J, 82 Abn Div, Ft Bragg NC
to USARPAC
Letterman AH, Pres
USA Map Sve,
59 AAA Bn, Ft Bliss
Mey Engr Gp, Granite
Ft Belvoir
USAES, Ft Belvoir
Brady Capt L K, XVIII Abn Corps, Ft
Brage N C to USAREUR
Finnegan Capt R L, MDW, Ft Belvoir Va
te USAREUR
Coverley Capt C F, 34 Engr Gp, Ft Ord
Calif to USARPAC
Hall Capt E F Jr, 568 Engr Bn, Ft Belvoir
Va to USAREUR
Martin Capt W A, 10 Trans Term BS, Ft
Story Va to USAREUR
Barrett ist Lt J, AH 4009, Fit Polk La to
USARPAC
McNabb Capt T F, 50 Med Cir Ce, Ft Ben-
ens Mass to USARPAC
McPherson ist Lt R H, USA Gar, Ft
Gordon Ga to USARP AC
O’Grady ist Lt E Pe 5 Tng Regt, Ft Wood
Mo to USARPA
Saxe ist Lt E B, “Usate Inf, Ft Dix N J
te USARPA
Smit ist Lt H A, 2 Tng Regt, Ft Wood Mo
to USARPA
Taylor ist Lt W T, Trans Tng Comd, Ft
Eustis Va to USARPAC
Weeden ist Lt R D, 710 Armor Tk Bn, Ft
Stewart Ga to USAREUR
DENTAL CORPS
Brady LCol J H, Walter Reed AMC, D C to
Asmara Eritrea
FINANCE CORPS
Berman 2d Lt N D, Fin Sch, Ft Harrison
Ind to USARPAC
Hodges CWO2 H W, USA Gar 6513, Ft
MacArthur Cal to USARAL
INFANTRY
Halpin LCol D E, OC of SA, D C to US-
AREUR
Springer LCol L F,
Calif to Cambodia
Connolly Col H A N, USALS, Pres Mont
Calif toCambodia
Bartelt Maj R H, Ha 9 Inf Div, Ft Carson
Colo te Bangkok Thailand
Tomlinson Maj LE, 4 Inf Div, Ft Lewis
Wash to USARPAC
MeDuffie Maj D P, USA Gar 3400, Ft Camp-
bell Ky to USARPAC
Robbins Maj G B Jr, Stu Det USALS, Pres
Mont Calif to Costa Rica
Novack Capt J A, Hq USASA, Arlington
Va to Frankfurt
Burke Capt J R, Hq US ASA, Arlington Va
to Sinop Turkey
Klundt Capt R E, USA Gar 4005, Ft Houston
Tex to USARPAC
Smith Capt J C, Inf Cen 3440, Ft Benning
Ga te USARPAC
Dormer Capt T L, 38 Inf Regt, Ft Lewis
Wash to USARPAC
Clark Capt J J, Ha Fifth USA, Chicago Tl
to USAREUR
Brown Capt G A Jr, 82 Abn Div, Ft Brags
N C te USAREU
Upton Capt B V Jr, 4th USA, Ft Houston
Tex to USAREUR
Michael Capt L G Jr, USAIS, Ft Benning
Ga to USAREUR
Powell Capt I A Jr, USAIS, Ft Benning
Ga to USAREUR
Smith Capt W H, USAIS, Ft Benning Ga
to USAREUR
Stables Capt L D Jr, USAIS, Ft Benning
Ga to USAREU
Stahl Capt J J Jr, USAIS, Ft Benning Ga
to USAREUR
Brooks Capt F W Jr, Ha US ASA 8600,
Arlington Va to Frankfurt
W 4H, Lang Sch, Pres Mont
Lang Sch, Pres Mont
ja
Booth ist Lt R L, 101 Abn Div, Ft Camp-
bell Ky to USAREU
Holzheimer ist Lt R D, 1 Battle Gp, Ft
Riley Kans to USAREUR
Hubbard ist Lt C J, USATC Inf, Ft Jack-
son S C to USAREUR
Kavanaugh ist Lt W J, 82 Abn Div, Ft
Bragg N C to USAREUR
McDevitt ist Lt L P, USATC Inf, Ft Dix
N J to USAREUR
Missildine. ist Lt W E, 101 Abn Div, Ft
Campbell Ky to USAREUR
Newman ist Lt F R, 1 Armd Div,
La to USAREUR
Smith Ist Lt J A, USATC Inf,
S Car to USAREUR
Venn Ist Lt R D, 101 Abn Div, Ft Camp-
bell Ky to USAREUR
Welch Ist Lt J H Jr, 3 Inf Div, Ft Benning
Ga te USAREUR
Wemmering ist Lt F A, & Tng Regt, Ft
Wood Mo to USAREUR
Young ist Lt C L, 82 Abn Div, Ft Brags
C te USAREUR .-
Culien ist Lt J D, Pers Cen, Ft Dix N J
te USAREUR
Howard ist Lt M W; USATC Armor, Ft
Knex Ky te USAREUR
Ft Polk
Ft Jackson
J, USATC Inf, Ft Dix N J
Saladino ist Lt P D, 4 RCT, Ft Devens
Mass to
iugent J, USATC Inf, Ft Dix N J
Oliver lst M, 101 Admin Co, Ft Cemp-| _
bell Ky to
Clark Ist Lt G F, 82 Abn Div, Ft Brags
N C to USAREUR
to
Meeks lst Lt W E, USAIC 2440, Ft Benning
ae ist Lt BR W, USAIS, Ft Benning
Moody ist Lt R W, USAIS, Ft Benning
MacMillan Capt K T, AMSS BAMC, Ft
to Oahu
AMSS BAMC, Ft
Smith Capt T J, AMSS BAMC, Ft Houston
Tex to Oahu TH
MILITARY POLICE CORPS
Wright Maj R M, PMG Cen, Ft Gordon Ga
to Karachi P:
Elledge CWO2 H C, 86 MP Det, Ft Benning
Ga to USAREUR
Ghiotte CWO2 A C, Ha ‘First USA, Gover-
Dilts CWO2 M L, 25 MP Det, Birmingham
Ala to USAREUR
Grigaby CWO3 R W, 26 MP Det, Ft Mon-
mouth N J te USAREU
Jacobs CWO3 E J, TPMG Cen, Ft Gordon
Ga to US
Morton CWO3 I B, PMG Cen, Ft Gordon
Ga to USARPAC
MEDICAL SERVICE CORPS | we
McAlpine LCol A R, BAMC, Ft Houston pe
Tex to USARPAC Pa.
Bierman Capt G W, BAMC 9940, Ft Hous-
ton Tex te USARPAC
Hopkins Capt C W, BAMC, Ft Houston
Capt
Ft Benning 24 tt kathigen s
To poy 3 Sch, Charlottesville
ist Lts D. B. Bailey, H. D.
Parsons.
MEDICAL SERVICE CORPS
lst Lt G. R. Hawkes to sta Univ of Va
Charlottesville.
ng 51 > o. ene te sta Univ of Se Calif
eles.
24 Lt A. F. Daly J
otk College Philadelphia, Pa.,
Ga to Smith to AH Ft Benning.
Horiuchi 34 Lt 7, USAIC, Dorothy F. Lyne to Sta Boston Univ,
a
Johnson 24 Lt W TC Arty, Ft| Te ‘Cole: Z
Charles “Ark to USAREUR On bap deemat bates, Scant. Lhdew
Partin 34 Lt D. , USATC Arty, Ft| Natividad A. Munoz, Renee H. 5
ee Ark to U L, White, J. B. Lewis Jr.
Temperley 24 Lt N USATC Armor, Ft eT ee aa . Dougherty,
FINANCE CORPS
To Fin Sch, Harrison;
3e Lis Bm dewsle D. D. Jones, R. F.
Kloska, 8. P. MacDaniel.
‘JUDGE ADVOCATE
GENERAL’S CORPS
rs G. a.
r to Sta Hahnemann
R. ¢ Mog ssant to sta Tufte Univ,
nors Island NY to USAREUR Boston,
Muse CWO2 R W Jr, 60 MP Det, Pres San | To Brooke Mic, Tex:
meisco Calif to USAREUR 24 L E. Good, E. H. Ratajezak, A. G.
Stepro CWO2 W K, 67 MP Det, Ft Wayne Toler >
Mich to USAREUR SIGNAL CORPS
Maj B. Forsythe to Sig Gar, Ft Monmouth.
Jean M. Penney to Sig Sch, Ft Mon-
mouth.
lst Lt K. L. Pack to USAREUR.
2a Lt
me “WARRANT OFFICERS
C. H. Shinfessel to Sig Sch, Ft Mon-
F. R. Ketchersid te Avn 6&ch, Ft
er.
Pisenek to 24th AAA Gp, Swarthmere,
for ultimate asg as the Comdr
Thereat may dir.
F. Renkel to Ist GM Brg, Ft Bliss.
AC
Whaley Capt R S&S, Fitzsimons AH, Denver
Colo to USARPAC
Madrano Capt a P 82 Med Det, Ft Houston
Tex to USAR
Fisher Capt x = Gen Dep, Schenectady
N Y to USARPAC
Busby ist Lt A, woe 9940,
UR
MeBride ist Lt R H, 57 Med Det, Ft Hous-
ton Tex to USAREUR Maj
Ogden CWO2 C J, Optical Maint Act, St
Louis Mo to USARPAC
ORDNANCE CORPS
MaeFeeters LCol D W, OASA, D € to
USAREUR
Walmer Capt R F, 378 Ord, Cp Irwin Calif
to Armishmaag
Campbell CWO2 J R, UsA Sig TC, Ft} CWO-
Gordon Ga to USAR
Carlin CWO2 J A, H
Island NY to ia
Larsen _ = L, USA Gar 9393, White
Ss PG N to. USAREUR
bet = Roy -!
d Pa to USAREUR
wills “CWOR JH, 41 Sig Bn, Ft Ord Calif
Capt
Capt
let Li
—— CWO2 J E, 20 Ord Co, Ft Lewis to
ARA
Ruttledge CWO3 C L, USAAMS, Ft Sill
Okla to USAREUR
North CWO3 W L,’708 Ord Bn, Ft Carson
Cole to USAREUR
Burnette CWOS R _ 9 QM Co, Ft Carsen
Colo to USAREU
QUARTERMASTER CORPS
Bozardt Leet M L, QM Sch, Ft Lee Va to
2
Grimes May G E, Ha MDW, D C to Saigon
Vietnam
Minor Capt W H Jr, QM Food Inst, Chicago
Ill to USARPAC
Nolan CWO2 J Se QM Tng Comd, Ft Lee
Va to USARE
Hughes LCol T K, Lang Sch, Pres Mont
Calif te Teheran Iran Maj
tson LCol E J, OCSIGO, D C_.to| Mai
USAREUR
Waldorf Maj F E, OC Sig 0, D C to| Maj
Hall Capt W W Jr, Stu Det USALS, Pres
Mont Calif to Athens Greece Maj
Burrus Capt C C, Regional Off, Chicago | Maj
Ill to USAREUR Maj
Pire Capt J R, Us. ARADCOM, Colo Spgs | M4)
iene a oe 5, USA Elect Pr Gr, Ft| Mad
City N Y¥ to USAREUR
McCloskey ist Lt E B, Pic Cen, Long Island
City N Y te USAREUR
Sharp ist Lt G = USALS, Pres Mont
Calif te USAREU
TRANSPORTATION CORPS
Ft Eustis Va to USAREUR
Eustis Va te USAREUR oP
Huser ist Lt A_W, 77 Sp Forees Gp, Fit
ming Ga to USAREUR
Bragg N C té USAREUR
Holbrook Capt C L, Trans Tng Comd, Ft
Eustis Va te USARPAC
Camp ist Lt W A, 15 Fid y B Lt Col
NC to USARE Hosp, Ft Brags) i,j William Priest, inf,
Maj Joseph 0. Kahoe Jr, Armor,
&
kg USA, Governors | Lt Col Carrell S. Crawford, MC.
EUR
Col Roy
to USAREUR Col Leslie M. Stewart, Arty.
Col Fulton G. Thompson, QMC.
Col. Stephen A. Mareinko, AGC,
appl.
Col Fred 8. Hanna, Arty.
ce Leland F. Adair, Ord.
PP
ow
cwoue LeRoy P. Norton, AGC,
pl.
cwo-4 Harvey P. McCrary,
app!.
Coffey Capt E L, Sup Maint Comd, St Louis = Edward C. Hall,
Mo to USAREU: wos H K. Kuchel
Reszarch Capt F A, Trans Tng Comd, Ft|© > gpmeaien ee tt
Separations
RELIEVED FROM AD
Ft Houston | Col Justin G. Doyle, AGC.
Tex to USARPA Lt Col Samuel R. Morris, TC.
Miller ist Lt R ig 19 Engr Bn, Ft Meade| Lt Col Herbert Van Zant, MPC.
Md to USAREUR Lt Col Cari J. Furr, Arty.
Bizer ist Lt J E, 57 Med Det, Ft Houston | Lt Col Dayid Hood Jr, TC.
Tex to USAREUR Lt Col Jerome B. Coray, AGC.
Bush ist Lt D C, 82 Med Det, Ft Houston | 't Col Eugene C. Davies, AGC.
Tex to USAREUR Lt Col Robert C. Browning, AGC.
Earl R. Bryant, DC.
Thomas W. Greén, inf.
Maj Virgil BR. Linder, Inf.
Maj Robert E. Facko, Arty.
Charles E. Wheeler, QMC.
Everett E. Davis, AGC.
t Jack D. Kuehler, OrdC.
Ist Lt Jeffery R. Parrette, SigC.
Ist Lt Lawrence W. Murphy Jr, SigC.
lst Lt Waiter L. H
ammond Jr, QMC.
2 Henry D. Shelihart, Arty.
SIGNATIONS
ic.
Cc S. Koval, A
Ist Lt ‘Raiph E. Wallingford, FC.
Ist Lt Jackson D. Dennis,
ve Gen Depot, New Cum-| CWO-2 Nevie Petrini, CE.
Armor.
RETIRED
Cochrane, AGC, upon own appl.
upon Qws
Col Cariton D. Goodiel, mc.
Lt Col —" K. Buckwalter, Inf, upon
own
USARP Lt Col Thomas W. Weiss, FC, upen own
I.
app:
Lt Col Fred H. Stoll, Inf, upon own appl.
Lt Le ae D. Gammill,
Armor, upon
n
Lt cane ‘Arthur G. Anderson, Inf, upon own
“We Cor Jehn 8. Carlisle, Inf, upon o pl.
SIGNAL CORPS —_ Frederick c. Heath. ordc,. oes "oe
a} Ralph G. Bell, CmiC, upon own appl.
+ Ae a D. Hickman, MPC, upen, own
Clifford Bishop, AGC, upon own appl.
USAREUR es eens M. Edmondston, CE, upon own
doe P. Zionis, CE, upon own appl.
Henry G. Mundt, CE, upon own appl.
Harold F. Selk, MSC, upon own appl.
Margaret M. Brandt, ANC.
Colo to USARP Maj Jack W. Dawson, QMC, upon own appl.
William A. Knapp Jr, MSC, upon own
H appl.
PR ng | %. = —_ Gr, Ft Capt Logan E. Wilson, OrdC, upon own
Huachuca Ariz to Tokyo Japan appl.
Chileote ist Lt D L, Pic Cen, Long Island | C4Pt Wyatt A, Rutledge, Inf, upon own
William H, Martin, AGC; upon own
Upon own
AGC, upon
own appl.
Sullivan Maj R W, Trans Term Cen, Ft CWO4 Thomas D. Williams, AGC, upon
Mason Calif to USARPAC own appl.
Acostasantini Capt F A, Trans Tng Comd, CWO-3 James W. Wilson, AGC, upon own
AGC, upon ewn
FC, upon ewn
(Continued en Page 37)
cearFrFr FrF?
SP? Fe PF St UU
es
ith.
on-
on-
re,
ppl.
owe
i.
FORT HOOD,:Tex. — Fort Hood
housewives, office and shop chiefs
and first sergeants frequently are
‘pleasantly Surprised When elec-
tricians, refrigeration. maintenance
men—even “plumbers—arrive at
the seeng of some minor catas-
trophe at about the same tinie they
hang up the phone ‘after calling
for help.
It’s done with radio-dispatched
‘Maintenance trucks:
These vehicles, fully equipped
for meeting problems in. plumbing,
heating, refrigeration, or electrical
work, are manned~ by — skilled
‘civilian employees’ who miay pro-
ceed’ directly from ‘one job to ‘an-
other without réturning. to the of-
fice by making use of the:two-way
radio mounted on each truck.
Each field of maintenance is én-
tirely self-contained, but they are
all coordinated in an operations
center where a call for service is
relayed by radio to the repair unit
d 2-Way Radio Trucks Speed
‘Maintenance Work at Hood
truck somewhere in the vicinity of
the trouble spot, and correction of
the problem will be undér way
shortly after it arises,
” * +
OBVIOUSLY, the new method is
a time saver, but few people real-
ize that the ordinary job now is
completed two hours sooner than
was the case under the old system.
From the point of view of the shop
foreman, it is equally important
that the backlog of work orders can
now be kept to a minimum, and he
is freed from administrative details
to attend to more technical matters.
Menu Design Contest
FORT. DIX, N.J.—Soldier artists
here were given an opportunity to
cash in on their. ability last week
when ‘the post offered a $25 sav-
ings bond for the best design -of
a Thanksgiving Day menu to be dis-
tributed. to soldiers and their
guests.
concérned. Frequently there is “a
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said, “have been graduated for as
low as eight or ten cents a flying
hour for accidents.”
He based his figures on all acci-
dents, no matter how slight, that
caused any damage to an aircraft
dollar-wise.
Two instructor flights
.. OCTOBER .19, 1957
ARMY 'IMES 17
were commended during the dinner
by the base commander, Col. Jules
FE, Gonseth Jr., and contractor, Wil-
liam J, Graham, They were White
One, headed by Flight Commander
Tom Brandenburg and Greén One,
commanded by W. R. Hailey.
Hailey’s flight had trained one
class for ten cents per hour acci-
- Flight School Cuts Accident Costs 43%
The acci-- “And some classes,” Lazenby
dent cost, to set a base record —
only to have it broken a few weeks
later by Brandenburg’s flight with
eight cents per hour,
“Beat the Eight” — referring to
White One’s eight-cent record — is
the slogan that will keynote the
new safety incentive program.
x
BURROW
machinery
thought
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Teamwork is an essential ingredient of all
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Keeping the varied abilities of himself and
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Engineering and improving upon these
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You, too, can be a part of this program of
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Our present needs are. for people expe-
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specific emphasis on men who by educa-
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Write or Telephone
oy M.
Placement Manager
PAOLI 4700
For Interview at Your Convenience
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CORPORATION
Research Center
PAOLI, PA.
On Philadelphia's
Main Line, Near
Historic Valley Forge
18 ARMY TIMES
OCTOBER 19, 1957|
The Mine-Layer’s Friend
BIG SAVINGS in work is promised by development of new me-
chanical mine planter at the Engineer Research and Develop-
ment Laboratories, Fort Belvoir,
Va. Unidentified soldiers here
are lifting a slab of earth to show how an antitank mine is placed
underground, entirely by machine shown in background, with
minimum disturbance of cover.
Pre-armed mines come off drum
pulled by tractor, travel down chute. As blade turns up sod,
mines drop into place, are covered at once.
Tests Begin on New
Type of Rifle Company
FORT MONROE, Va. The
Army’s Combat Development Ex-
perimental Center (CDEC) began
experiments this week which may
lead to another reorganization of
the rifle company to enable it to
fight with the weapons and equip-
ment of the 1965-1970 era.
Three test companies are testing
proposed organization, tactics and
doctrine at the Camp Roberts-Hunt-
er Liggett Military Reservation,
Calif. Scientists and military ob-
servers from CDEC will observe
the tests. Results of their observa-
tions will influence tactical doc-
trine for 10 to 15 years from now.
The tests began this week, will
continue until about Christmas.
The weapons of the future will
not, of course, be available. But
the characteristics expected to be
Ord Opens New
FORT ORD, Calif. — “‘The Care
and Operation of a Potato Peeling
Machine” and “How to Play Vol-
leyball” — these are only two of
the 2600 films available at the film
and equipment exchange here
Besides the 2600-16 millimeter
film library, the film exchange has
1500 film strips, 400 transparencies,
and all types of film equipment,
which range from overhead to film
Army Advisor Named
WASHINGTON William M
Batten, vice president of the J. C.
Penney Co., has been appointed a
member of the Army Advisory
Committee on Civilian Personnel
Management by Secretary of -the
Army Wilber M. Brucker. Batten
served as a lieutenant colonel dur-
ing War II as an assistant director
of civilian personnel for the Quar-
termaster Corps.
available then, as well as the char-
acteristics expected in future ve-
hicle development — both cross-
country and aerial — and those of
other kinds of equipment will be
projected. Current weapons will
be used to simulate those of the
future as closely as possible.
Aggressor forces will take part
in the tests, along with the three
experimental companies.
The entire CDEC operation jis
under the direction of Brig Gen,
Frederick W. Gibb, whose head-
quarters are at Fort Ord, Calif.
The troops involved in the experi-
ments are drawn from the Ist Bat-
tle Group, 10th Infantry. Major
mission of the group is support of
CDEC, which was established ap-
proximately a year ago by CONARC
CG, Gen. W. W.. Wyman.
Film Exchange
strip projectors. Also the exchange
has available other types of equip-
ment, such as tape recorders and
projecto printers.
All this was on display at the
opening day ceremonies last week,
when Maj. Gen. William M. Breck-
inridge, Fort Ord commanding
general, cut a ribbon of film to of-
ficially open the film and equip-
ment exchange
The films and equipment are
available to all units here and to
all non-profit organizations, both
Army and civilian. A special list-
ing of film available to civilian non-
profit organizations is. available at
the exchange.
As new films come into the ex-
change they are listed in the Daily
Bulletin and films of general in-
terest are listed in the post news-
paper each week. A film can be
previewed in one of the two rooms
available for that purpose right in
the film exchange.
field.
- ~ .
MEANWHILE, it was learned
that the Army’s requests to proceed
with a satellite program had been
turned down by the Defense De.
partment five times. It was charged
that the Army had been denied the
authority to fire a modfied Jupiter
C test vehicle which is still stand-
ing at Cape Canaveral, Fla. A 20-
inch satellite is ready to be
launched with the Jupiter.
There were other charges this
week against management of the
rocket and satellite programs.
Scientists involved in the rocket
program claimed that top Defense
on Nov, 7,
Bolsheviic
propose a_ centralized
agency, even if the. Administration
doesn’t move. The White House, in
the past, has blamed Congress for
failure to provide enough money
the
atomie bomb while n-
sible directly. to the Chief of Staff,
the Secretary of War and President
Roosevel
Vets
(Continued from Page 1)
mals and for private pets on mili-
tary posts is to be suspended. Only
where animals are being used in
research peculiar to the military
and no civilian veterinary service
is available are public animals
(government owned) to be cared
for by military veterinary officers.
By Décember 1, Secretary
Brucker is to tell Defense whether
he has been able to get the Depart-
ment of Agriculture to take over
a large portion of the work now
done by the Army’s 1800-man Vet-
erinary Corps. He is also to report
how well it is working and what
the costs will be.
Assuming that this reduction in
veterinary servicés provided in-
ternally works out, the Army may
have to find new jobs for about
100 Regular officers and 500 en-
listed men. They will be trans-
ferred, reclassified, reassigned or
released,
The Army Veterinary Corps con-
sisted of about 389 officers and
Tag enlisted men as of October
The corps was established in
1916. With the departure of ani-
mals from the Army, it took on
such jobs as food inspection, sani-
tary control and inspection where
animal products were stored, proc-
essed and dispensed, and control
of animal borne diseases trans-
missable to man.
As a result of the Wilson order,
the corps will continue its func-
tions overseas pretty much un-
changed, But in the United States
there won’t be much for it to do.
Control of rabies and other ani-
mal diseases which men can get
on military posts will remain a re-
sponsibility of the Army Surgeon
General as it ig now. Whether the
Veterinary Corps will be involved
in this is hard to tell from the
Wilson directive.
3 Officers Assigned
To Duty at APG
ABERDEEN PROV. GROUND,
Md.—Lt. Col, Gilbert P. Dubia was
one of three new officers who ar-
rived’ here recently. Col. Dubia
was named chief of the logistics
division, replacing Lt. Col. Vincent
P. Berger.
Maj. Robert L. Moore has taken
over as chief of the logistics branch
at the Ordnance Training Comd.,
and 2d Lt. Annie M. Whitman be-
came CO of WAC Det. E at the Ord-
nance School,
Top EM Spots Frozen
(Continued from Page 1)
clearing out of individuals under
the reduction program and
normal turnover of men reléased
after completing obligated service.
On the controlled MOS list, there
has been a net reduction of three
occupational specialties in which
romotions are forbidden. Actual-
, three MOSs are added, and six
which were controlled in ' July
dropped.
* +
THE NEW controlled MOSs are:
421—Small arms repairman;
632—Track vehicle mechanic;
773—Ordnance -parts specialist.
No promotions are permitted ‘in
these three MOSs to any of the
top three grades.
MOSs dropped from the control-
led list are:
321—Lineman, in -~which. promo-
tions to grades E-6 and E-5 were
banned in the quarter beginning
July 1;
411 — Ammunition specialist,
where the freeze was On promo-
tions to grades E-7 and E-6;
518— Construction foreman, in
which the freeze applied to promo-
tions to grades E-6 and E-5;
542—Duty foreman, where the
freeze applied to all three top
grades;
621— Engineer equipment meé-
chanic, controlled in grades E-6
and E-5;
717 — Administrative specialist,
which was frozen only in grade E-7,
*
THE FOLLOWING changes. in
contro] of promotions were also
made a part of the quota message:
715—Medical records specialist,
which was controlled in all grades,
Gordon’s Vets
Get Refresher
FORT GORDON, Ga, — Instruc-
tion within the Ist Tng. Regt. took
a new twist recently, when certain
cadre instructors found their “stu-
dents” of the higher rather than
the lower grades.
Instead of the familiar youthful
faces of trainees, the classes were
“loaded” with battle scarred vet-
erans with a preponderance of first
graders and officers.
Deficient in basic subject mat-
ter? Not these experts! Rather,
they are complying with regula-
tions pertaining to mandatory sub-
jects required either om an annual
refresher basis or “one time” in-
struction not previously received.
rate! is controlled only in the top
0;
764—QM supply specialist, is
controlled in all grades (E-5
through E-7) instead of only in
the top two;
765 —Signal supply specialist,
now is controlled in the top two
grades instead of in the top three;
941—Cook, now has a ban on
promotion to E-5 added to the
prior ban on promotions to E-6
and E-7;
952—Confinement specialist, also
has had added controls on promo-
tion to E-5 as well as on E-6 and
MOSs in whieh there -is a freeze
are listed below in fuli. The code
is: (b) indicates no promotions to
grades E-6 and E-7; (c) indicates
freeze in grades E-7 and E-5 (not
in E-6); and (d) indicates control
over E-6 and E-5 (but not E-7).
073—Recreation specialist
421—Small arms repairman
(c)524—Utilities foreman
551—General warehouseman
553—Subsistence storage special-
ist
(d)631— Wheel vehicle mechanic —
632—Track vehicle mechanic
(b)635—Automotive mechanie
(d)643—Truckmaster
714—Postal clerk
¢b)715—Médical records clerk
(b)716—Personne] specialist
719—Movement specialist
762—Engineer supply specialist
763—Ordnance supply specialist
764—QM supply specialist
(b)765—Signal supply specialist
767—Medical supply specialist
(e)768—Ordnance parts special-
ists
773—Ordnance parts specialist
941—-Cook
942—Meat cutter
943—Bread baker
951—-Military policeman
952—Confinement specialist
24 Apartments Built
For 36th AAA Unit
FORT MEADE, Md. — Twenty-
four new apartments were recent-
ly opened to personnel of Btry. D,
36th AAA Bn., near Tolchester
Beach, Md. The battery is an ele-
ment of the Baltimore defense,
commanded by the 35th AAA Bri-
gade with its headquarters at
Meade,
bedroom units for officer and EM
and their families.
—<...
CONNECTICUT'S ENTRY in the Miss Universe beauty contest,
Miss Rosemary Gale, of Hartford, holds portrait of her pre-
sented by the Fairfield (Conn.) Btry. Nike site during the unit's
recent open house, at which she was a of honor. The por-
trait was painted 'by PFC James H. Simmonds, Hq. Btry., and
presented by PFC James R. Bailey, above, who as soldier of the
month in the 741st AAA Missile Bn. acted as the beauty queen’s
escort for the day.
Troops Cut 300-4C0 Miles
Of Fire Breaks at Carson
FORT CARSON, Colo.—Between
300 and 400 miles of fire breaks
have been cut through the Carson
reservation to prepare for possible
brush and grass fires, the pest én-
gineer section reports.
The heaviest growth’ of vegeta-
tion in many years at Carson
prompted the project which was
accomplished by the 15th and 21st
Eng. Bns. since Aug. 23.
Carson fire chief Arthur Breit
Lawson Field CO
FORT BENNING, Ga.—Col. Wil-
liam H. Billings has assumed the
duties of commander, of Lawson
Army Air Field here. He succeeds
Col. Gilmon A. Huff who retired
recently.
‘says that several brush and grass
fires have been.extinguished, main-
ly by troops in the area affected>
before great damage occurred.
Many were caused from artil-
lery and small arms firing in the
impact areas, but carelessly dis-
carded cigarettes and matches are
a more dangerous fire hazard,
Chief Breit says.
Engineers bulldozed fire breaks
at grades up to 70-degrees on the
rugged terrain at the southern end
of the Carson reservation.
At the north end of the post
are plowed strips 20 to 60 feet
wide. It was there the holocaust
that destroyed much of Carson in
1950 jumped ‘the highway and en-
tered the post.
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Riley Museum Has Proof
FORT RILEY, Kans. — You
will get along with six wash-
boards, not 12 — and you'd better
not order another razor hone for
your men in a good long time.
It took the Army 33 days and
20 indorsements on the original
request to get that message back
to a Fort Riley officer more than
a half ceritury ago.
The dog-eared document which
tells the sad story was found in
an old trunk in nearby Junction
Citx by MSgt. Willie Franklin of
the Fifth Army food service school
here.
Its indorsements fluttering like
battle streamers, the old corre-
spondence will be displayed in the
Fort Riley :Museum to offer con-
solation to modern supply officers
who struggle with budget consid-
erations. —
Here’s the story the letter un-
folds:
On June 13, 1905, the officer in
charge of prisoners, a 2d Lt. E. C.
Buckanan, requested that the com-
missary issue 12 wash boards, one
razor hone and one barber’s clip-
pers for use in the stockade. The
request pointed out that the stock-
ade had been issued five wash tubs,
but no wash boards to go with
them.
From that office
started its journey. Passing over
an adjutant’s desk, it was halted
at the commissary by the ques-
tion of what happened to the hone
“of good quality” issued only six
months ago? Back to the starting
the request
OCTOBER 19, 1957
point for an explanation. “The
hone was dropped and accidentally
broken.”
THIS MATTER cleared up, the
document was on its way — here
a military secretary, there a -com-
missary officer, Fort Riley to
Omaha, and finally eastward to
the mecca of all government
paper, Washington, D.C.
On its tenth indorsement, in the
office of the Chief of Staff, the re-
quest went to the Commissary
General of the Army. With a com-
mendable spirit of economy, that
office, indorsee number 11, cut the
washboard request to six and
added, “. . . it does not follow be-
cause a hone is recommended this
time that another will be in so
Fort Myer to Open
Sabre Room Oct. 25
FORT MYER, Va. — When Maj.
Gen. John G. Van Houten, CG,
Military District of Washington,
presents his sword to the Fort
Myer officers’ club on Oct. 25, it
will mark the opening of the Sabre
Room in Wainwright. Hall.
An appeal is being made to all
Army officers — active or retired
— who have a sabre which has
special significance to donate it to
the Sabre Room. All accepted
donations will be displayed with
the sabre’s history and the name
of the donor.
se of per fecp Ms My
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ARMY TIMES 19
Red Tape Plagued Old Army, Too
short a time, the one previousl
furnished should have lasted, with
proper care, for a longer time”
Back to the Chief of Staff for
approval, indorsement number 12.
Then starting slowly down through
echelons, gathering speed, and in-
dorsements, as it went, it. arrived
‘at its point of origin on number
20, just 35 days after its de-
parture.
Net result: | Six - washboards,
one razor hone, one pair barber
clippers.
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20 ARMY TIMES OCTOBER 19, 1957
JOINT CIVILIAN ORIENTATION CONFERENCE
A Gone Croc
TWO YEARS of patient efforts
paid off last week when MSgt.
Robert L. nce nabbed this
eight-and-a-half foot croco-
dile in a Gatun Lake training
area in Panama. Spence has
been trying to clear crocodiles
out of the area, where USCARIB
School students practice mili-
tary bridge construction. A
piece of wood, attached to a
steel cable, was the bait.
Radio Sergeant Stout Sees
24th Div. Come and Go
WITH THE 24TH INF. DIV.,
Korea. — Sgt. Bryce W. Stout was
in Hawaii 16 years ago when the
24th Div. was organized.
He was on hand again this week
when the division held its last or-
But the sergeant, who had spent
his life serving the 24th, couldn’t
take much time to reminisce.
He was too busy setting up com-
munications for the organization
day football game.
Key Civilians ‘Ins
which illustrated the Army’s
-
key position in national defense, Maj. Gen.
Army
FORT BENNING; Ga.—Guests and conferees to the 25th Joint Civilian Orientation
Conference left Fort Benning this week after three days of demonstration and displays
B.
Powell, Infantry School comman-
dant, and members of his staff
were on hand to bid farewell to the
70 top U.S. business, government
and military leaders who attended
the three-day conference.
The Army phase of JCOC is held
at the post to acquaint the Amer-
ican people with the role of the
Army both on the nuclear and
conventional battlefield.
s - *
BEFORE departing, the JCOC’s
witnessed an exhibition of pre
cision flying by a Fort Rucker,
Ala., square dance team.
The night before, the JCOCs had
dinner in the field after witnessing
a demonstration of Army conven-
tional and nuclear artillery
weapons.
At the dinner they were ad-
dressed by Gen. Willard G. Wy-
man, commander of the Con-
tinental Army Command.
Shortages of equipment and com-
bat ready personnel imperil the
ability of the U. S. armed forces
to meet the brush fires of ag-
gression, Gen, Wyman told the
group.
“We in the military are your |
servants. We use the tools you |
give us to accomplish the mission
of national defense as a team. But
the problem of balance is ever
ganization day.
“I’m sorry to see it go,” said
a man who has spent most of his
16 years in the Army serving in
the 24th. “I liked the Taro Leaf
division so much that when I re-
enlisted last year, | asked for the
24th in Korea.”
Stout, who is today a radio re-
lay sergeant at the 24th Signal Co.,
was an artillery forward observer
at. Schofield Barracks on Oct. 1,
1941, when the 24th came into
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“They had a band, and a big
parade and talks by many officers,
but nothing like this celebration,”
As a leader in the fast-gro
ness, Shell Chemical] offer
Stout said, with a wave of his hand p
that took in the 5000 people who chemical engineers,
witnessed competition , in almost | nical service, products ap
a score of military proficienc? | are available.
contests
Stout was a member of the 13th
FA Bn. when that unit was inte ,
grated into the “Hawaiian Divi- Both our Manufacturing
sion.” He was with the division ments conduct rotational
when it was bombed at Pearl Har-
famijiarize you with our a
bor and was in battle with the
24th during eight campaigns in qualified
the Pacific. , .
“I will be happy,” Sgt. Stout
said, “to be a member of the Ist é
Cav. Div.” fully as interested in your
Stout met Maj. Gen. Ralph W.
Zwicker, the 24th’s CG, during policy, backed by continu
the festivities at Rec Ctr No. 1.
The two old soldiers traded memo-
ries of Schofield Barracks and dis-
cussed the future of the regiments
which make up the 24th.
——
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Record Claimed
FORT BLISS, Tex. A new
RCAT flight record has been set
by the Oro Grande Range RCAT
Btry. of the Army Air Defense
Center’s Ist Guided Missile Group.
The drone reached an altitude
of 28,000 feet, flying for three
hours and one minute. The RCAT
outdid its performance of July 3,
1956, by 500 feet and four minutes.
The RCAT Biry., only one of its
type in the Army, is commanded
by Lt. Alfred D. Barlow.
Key personnel concerned with
the record flight were: M/Sgt.
Lauren E. Robbins, controller; SP3
John E. Rubis, and §Sp2 John
Ingram.
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us,” the four-star general
“Great problems face the Joint
Chiefs of Staff in whd
gets how much and what is in the
balance,” Gen. Wyman pointed
out.
Earlier guided and ballistic
Army weapons, including the giant
Redstone and Honest John rockets
and the Corporal and Nike missiles,
were displayed to the conferees.
The display, narrated by Lt. Col.
with
sta
Kenneth E. Pell, featured both a}
drive - by of modern artillery
weapons and a static display of the
projectiles, .
Other weapons on display in-
cluded the Little John rocket and
the Lacrosse surface-to-surface mis-
sile. .
' A squad of men from the 59th
Artillery Battalion from Fort
Bragg, N. C., demonstrated how
-
placed i
pleted a simulated fire mission.
Before lunch The Infantry
School’s Ranger Dept. staged a
demonstration on its new confi-
dence course at Victory Pond.
Five hundred and seventy-six In-
fantrymen of the 101st Abn. Div.’s
50ist Bat. Gp. pariicipated in a
mass parachute jump in a spectacu-
lar climax to an airborne demon-
stration on the first day. . :
A handsome young
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> Peed FECA F |
Feo
=
eceeeceeceseceoeeeoseecessseeseeseeee 93888888880
an
ver
aL
s: Sattylite Upsettin' Moonmen
I'm more fear-
ful than a Ma-
son runnin’ a
floatin’ crap
game in a town
ca 4
ice chief is K.
of C. What I The Old Sarge
been hopin’ all along wouldn’t hap-
pen has. Man has stuck his big
beak into the unyverse where it’s
abeut as welcome as Liberace
would be on the Detroit Lions.
- om .
“{ AIN’T goin’ into all the rea-
sons why I know there’s people up
i
:
4 re one of the big
muckamucks at the Army’s hit-or-
missile works down at Huntsville
says the Reds can reach the moon
with a rocket by the end of the
year. Which might make it the
end of ali the years. Next I see
where a Japanese space travel out-
fit is sellin’ land on Mars for $2.70
an acre. Them Japs got a real yen
for buyin’ into planets.”
“Ts that ‘yen’ reference a pun?”
~ “Could be, sonny, but I ain’t got
the time to decide. The last thing
I read comes from Illinois where
a Chicago feller named Jim Man-
gan has already claimed outer
space with the Cook County deeds
office. He says the Rooskies ain’t
OCTOBER 19, 1957
got no right trespassin’ their sat-
tylite on his property. ©
“What nobody has bothered to
wonder with all this moonin’ aroun’
is what the inhabbytants of Mars
an’ the moon an’ all the other real
estate out there thinks about get-
tin’ rocketed at an’ sub-divided.
7 7” ”
“IF THE sattylite was on the oth-
er foot an’ we got word that a
rocket might soon be headed our
way from the moon or that the
Martinis was plannin’ to build a
Levitation Town west of Pennsyl-
vania Avenoo, how would we re-
act? The same way them fellers
up there must be reactin’, sonny,
an’ if there’s anythin’ what gives
me cold sweats it’s the thought
of a creetchur with three heads
an’ seven feet—all left ones—get-
tin’ sore at me.
“ ‘Say Sam,’ one of them Moon
Mullinses says to another.
‘What’s goin’ on with them pa-
lookas on Earth? First off they
try to knock out our concession
by throwin’ up another moon—
did you see it, by the way?
Saddest little two-bit excuse for
a moon you ever saw. Feller
tryin’ to use it romancin’ a girl
wouldn’t have a chance as she'd
never lose her heads over it.
“*Now I hear they’re goin’ to
take target practice on us with a
rocket,. Man could get hisself hurt
that way; as they say in them old
Gary Cooper cowboy movies we
monnytored off their TV.’
- “*You’re so right, George,’
says Sam, who has picked up some
slang hisself whilst monnytorin’
Broadway people on panel shows,
‘Course, you can’t expect much
from that bunch. Aside from a oc-
casional truce or two, they been
beatin’ on each others heads since
they was invented an’ they got a
violent streak in ’em. Not that I
ever seen one to judge firsthand.
Fn RNOLD
UMN Aa Mi
ARMY TIMES 21
Shaggy Dog
Corner
(Readers are invited to send in
favorite shaggy dog stories for this
corner. We'll pay $3 for each one
we print. Send stories to SHAGGY
DOG EDITOR, Army Times, 2020
M St. NW, Washington 6, D.C.
None can be returned),
LOYD OLES of 1018 So. 60th
St., Tacoma, Wash., sends in
this week’s winning story:
A farmer went to the country
fair where he found a horse for
sale which he liked very much. So
he bought the horse and planned
to ride it home.
At the last moment, however,
the seller said, “I have a small con-
fession to make about this horse.
He’s absolutely all right in every
way except for one small bad
habit: he sits on grapefruit.
“How’s that?” asked the aston-
ished farmer.
“I said,” replied the seller, “that
he sits on grapefruit. Every time
he sees a grapefruit, he sits down
on it. Just a habit, I guéss.”
“Well,” said the farmer, “no
grapefruit around my place, so I
guess it makes no difference.”
So the farmer rode the horse
toward home. But on the way, he
had to ford a small river in the
very middle of which the horse
sat down, spilling.the farmer into
the river.
Mad and disgusted, the farmer
looked all around but he. could
find no grapefruit in’ the stream.
Time passed and the farmer was
unable to get the horse out of the
stream. Finally, he decided to
walk back to the fair.
There he found the man who
sold him the horse and he sadly
recounted his tale of woe.
“Oh, yes,” said the man, “I for-
got to tell you. That horse also
sits on fish, too.”
Fire Thrower Shown
FORT BENNING, Ga. —.. The
M-67 flame thrower tank that can
shoot a deadly stream of liquid
fire with fantastic accuracy at dis-
tances up to 300 yards was demon-
strated at the 25th semi-annual
Joint Civilian Orientation Con-
ference here this week.
42-18-35?
STATISTICAL minded Jayne
Mansfield is quick to point
with pride to figures 42-18-35
in reference to her own, but
the picture on the right would
seem to make one wonder
about the “18” and “35,” any-
way. Or is it just an unusual
camera angle? Bottom photo
(the one below) was snapped
the same night during Jayne's
recent tour of London.
Talk is they sent a boy named
Video out this way once but no-
body I know ever laid #ne eye
on him let alone all six.’
“ ‘Another thing I hear,’ remarks
George, ‘Is that their real estate
brokers are sellin’ Mars by the
parcel.’
“‘Sellin’ it!’ roars Sam. ‘Why
they don’t even own it. How can
they sell somethin’ them horny-
headed Martinis has owned since
the year minus one?’
’* Search me, pal,’ comes the an-
swer. ‘Hell, they try to claim every-
thin’ they see. A few years ago
a comet went by them an’ some
feller named Halley said it was
his. Said it so often that people
just natchally started to call it
Halley’s comet, though the man
ain’t got no more right to it than
I got to Mrs. Miller.’
“*Pretty little thing, aint she?’
says George. ‘Knowin’ she’s there
makes me sad to think of what
we're goin’ to have to do. But we
gotta wipe ’em out quick with a
blast from our super whizbang.
This ain’t widely known, so keep
it under your hats. But yesterday
our secret service monnytors
picked up the dreadfulest threat
of all. A move is underway on
earth to move the Washington
Sennytors franchise to the moon.’
“‘Gawd save us!’ cries Sam.
‘They've gone too far an’ we must
defend ourselves.’ ”
om * *
“ARE YOU finished, Sarge?” I
asked.
“Finished, done, quits,” he said.
“Now then, what real signifi-
cance has the earth satellite for
you?”
“Lad, I may have been exag-
geratin’ here or there. Mebbe
they got five left feet an’ two
right. Mebbe they don’t see
nothin’ in Mrs. Miller. But I
can’t shake the notion that
somebody is up there, some-
where. The Lord couldn’t have
made such a blunder as to stake
everythin’ on us. An’ the least
we can do is show a little con-
sideration for the feelin’s of
others out in space. Somethin’
we ain’t quite been able to ever
manage down here.”
Event Recorder
CLEVELAND—An event record-
er, which instantly and simultan-
eously records up to 100 channels
of on-off information in permanent
chart record form, has been an-
nounced by Brush Instruments, di-
vision of Clevite Corporation.
The new instrument will prove
particularly valuable in the check-
ing of electrical and _ electronic
sequences in missile and aircraft
control systems, range timing read-
outs (time coding), in the evalua-
tion of telephonic communications
systems, in checking relay “chat-
ter,” contact-bounce, close-time,
and many other applications where
on-off test data is required.
TOP SECRET CONFERENCE
What Rhymes with Sputnik?
By BOB HOROWITZ
(This newspaper managed to sneak a tape recorder under the table during a top secret conference o
9 Pp g I
three physicists in Washington last week. The scientists were preparing a report to the President on the
relative status of American and Russian efforts to launch satellites.
Participating were John C. Nickson,
president of the Falls Church Institute of Technology; Dr. Van Gard, Director of the Office of Adminis
trative Mobilization in the DepLog Section of the Nuclear Program Administration; and Werner von Black,
German physicist brought to this country after World War II to do basic research in round ball propul
sion. Some of the material has been deleted for security purposes
GARD: I suppose you wonder
why I. assembled you here today.
We have to prepare a memor-
andum to the President on the rel-
ative status of Project , Vanguard
and Sputnik, with particular em-
phasis on our failure to...
NICKSON: You mean we got
Editor.)
to tell Eisenhower why the Rus
sians beat us.
GARD: Well, yes.
BLACK: Should we tell the Pres-
ident about the satellite we found
two years ago?
GARD: What satellite?
BLACK: Well, our radar picked
up an orbiting object in November,
1955, and we sent up an airplane
to catch it. After snagging it in a
big butterfly net, it was brought to
Huntsville, where we examined it
(See HOW WE, Page 24)
22 ARMY TIMES
OCTOBER 19, 1957
New Military Volumes
In Paperback Editions
By BOB HOROWITZ
E University of California Press has just published one of the
finest books to come out of the Civil War.
“The Road to Rich-
mond,” by Maj. Abner R. Small, consists of a perceptive war
an excellent narrative describing New England small town life before
the war and Army life after hostilities began, and a list of expenses
during captivity in the Southern prison.
Prisoners had to pay $1 a
loaf (Confederate money) for bread, $12 for a pack of cards, $25 tor
a shirt and $2 per pumpkin pie.
Adams Small.
Life aboard the carrier York-
town during the biggest naval war
in history, the Pacific campaign
of World War II, is described with
humor and freshness by J. Bryan
Ill in “Aircraft Carrier,” Ballan-
tine published it in a 35 cent
edition.
Another Ballantine book about
the Pacific Ocean war is “The
Battle for Leyte Gulf,” the story
of the largest sea battle of all time.
C. Vann Woodward has used infor-
mation from both sides to describe
the battle, in which the Japanese
navy suffered losses about five
times the losses suffered by the
Germans at the battle of Jutland.
35 cents.
Signet has just republished one
of the best novels about World
War II Infantrymen. It is Harry
Brown’s “A Walk in the Sun,” the
story of a platoon during the first
stages of the Italian campaign.
Hollywood made an excellent movie
out of it (35 cents).
Déll’s latest 50 cent paperback
is one of the best book bargains
anywhere. It’s the “Modern
American Dictionary” of 46,000
words. Another Dell bargain is
the 50 cent edition of “Great
American Short Stories,” edited by
Wallace and Mary Stegner. They
include pieces by Faulkner, Mel-
ville, James, Poe, O’Hara, Thur-
ber, Twain, Steinbeck and others.
One of the great heroes of the
Army, Sergeant Bilko, is the sub-
ject of the latest 35 cent paper-
back by Ballantine. The book con-
sists of the scripts of 10 of the
funniest Bilko shows
The University of Michigan
Press recently reissued its $1.65
paperback edition of Allen Tate’s
“Stonewall Jackson.” The book
studies the eccentricities, religious
zeal and tactical brilliance of one
of our more unusual military
heroes.
* ~ *
OTHER NEW BOOKS
The story of the Confederate
chaplains during the Civil War
is told in “Chaplains in Gray,” by
Dr. Charles F. Pitts, a Baptist
minister of Blytheville, Ark. The
book, published by Broadman Press
of Nashville, Tenn., sells for $2.75.
Military developments are in-
cluded in Year’s “Pictorial History
of Science and Engineering,” which
2 New Books
About Suez
By MONTGOMERY FAIRFAX
HILE earth satellites and Lit-
tle Rock capture our attention,
the Middle East and the Suez
Canal continue to be focal points
of the East-West struggle. Two
books dealing with this subject
were published recently.
William F. Longgood’s ‘“Suez|
Story: Key to the Middle East,”
traces the history of the canal and
the surrounding area. It is writ-
ten in a popular style (Greenberg,
$3.50).
“Revolt on the Nile,” by Anwar
el Sadat, tells the history of the
eoup which eventually put Nasser
in the saddle. The book, published
by John Day ($3) is fervently na-
tionalistic and, occasionally,
sistent.
incon-
The $1.50 book is edited by Harold
ranges from the first use of fire
to contemplated uses of nuclear
energy and space satellites.
Whenever an airplane crashes,
intensive investigations are made.
A study of these probes has been
compiled by Clayton Knight, under
the title “Air Disasters: How and
Why the World’s Worst Air
Crashes Happened.” Greenberg
is the publisher at $3.95
Some old military matters are
discussed in a book recentiy pub-
lished by the University of Florida
Press. “The Fuero Militar in
New Spain, 1764-1800,” by Dr. Lyle
N. McAlister, traces the civil-mili-
tary conflict in colonial Mexico and
the subsequent rise of the Mexi-
can army to power. $3.25.
Henry Regnery Co. has two new
books of interest to military
readers. One, “From Balloons to
Jets,” by Howard Scamehorn, is a
history of Aeronautics ($5). The
other, “Yankee G-Man,” is by
Frederick Ayer, now a special as-
sistant for intelligence to the Sec-
retary of the Air Force. The book
is about Ayer’s adventures as an
intelligence agent. ($5).
~ >
OTHER new books of interest
to the military are:
“Reporting the Wars,” by Joseph
J. Matthews (University of Minne-
sota Press, $6.50).
“Realities of Space Travel,” is a
symposium of 16 scientific articles
on recent developments and re-
searches, edited by L. J. Carter
(British Book Centre, $8.75).
“Periscope Patrol,” by John F.
Turner is the story of the Malta
submarines during World War IJ
(British Book Centre, $3.25).
taal * *
NEW FICTION
“The Drummond Tradition,” by
Charles Mercer is the story of a
family with a military background
(Putnam’s, $3.50).
“The Path to the Nest of Spid-
ers,” by Italo Calvino, is the story
of a young Italian boy during the
German occupation of World War
II (Beacon, $3.50).
“War Country,” by William 0.
Turner, is set in the territory of
Washington during the Indian
fighting days (Houghton Mifflin,
$2.75).
“Pvt. Steve Fletcher, U.S. Ma-
rine,” by Charles F, Johnson, is
for boys 12 and up, telling about
an undisciplined hot rodder and
his adventures as a Leatherneck
(Winston, $2.95).
“Lilly and. the Sergeant,” by
Martin Yoseloff, points up the
choice between a military and a
civilian career (Funk and Wag-
nalls, $3.50).
“Not By Bread Alone,” by Vladi-
mir Dudintsev, is the novel that
caused a storm in Russia, pointing
up some of the defects in Com-
munism (Dutton, $3.95).
BOOK BUYERS
WASHINGTON—Readers in-
terested in beoks mentioned
here can buy them by sending
orders to Air Force Times Book
Department, 2020 ‘M’ St., NW,
Washington 6, D.C. Enclose a
check or money order if the
book price is shown, If not
shown, ask for price informa-
tion. Books will be shipped post
paid to any APO or ZI address.
York. $3.75.
S pgt tne oh the missile era upon us,
y who writes about
the man-less ein tails seems to take
one of two tacks. He either takes
off on the wild - blue - yonder,
science-fiction kick to dazzle every-
body with his powers of prediction,
or he packs in so many charts,
diagrams and technical jargon the
average reader can barely under-
stand him, much less dispute him.
Both approaches are likely to
leave the author looking like quite
an expert.
But, one wonders now and again
why somebody doesn’t write a
good, basic, readable book about
missiles—what they are, how they
work and what they are supposed
to do.
Well, author Coombs has done
so. And apparently it is by choice.
He’s written enough about the
plane and missile business to get
high-horse about it if he wanted to.
What he has come up with, how-
ever, is a nice, quiet yet illuminat-
ing report on missiles for the gen-
eral public. There are a few charts
and diagrams (all simple). But it
is mostly clear, interesting
laced with understandable text.
Even the oversized print is a
welcome innovation. For some rea-
son, missile reporters seem to
figure their work looks more au-
thentic if the reader hag to strain
to make it out.
As Timely As a Satellite
Rockets, Missiles and Moons by Charles Coombs, William Morrow and Co. New
Reviewed by BRUCE CALLANDER
renders it useless.”
Bible Reading on Trains
An old law in Vermont once re-
to passengers traveling on Sundays.
35—Fall in drops
O—NNEWOW AO FunUOae fH <—xK OOF
101—T ips
168—Scottish caps
-
52—Baby’s bed
ACROSS 6¢— Babylonian 189 Paver measure 90—Concurred
deity Vessel #1—Put up stake
1—Squander 68— Japanese ie_Pabiie vehicle 92—Resort
6é— Damage measure {ootes 93— Browns
10—Lean-to 69— Unruly child 1356— Break 94— East Indies
14—Strikes out 70—Eges suddenly (abbr.)
19—Unit of . 71—Succulent 137— Former 96—Man’s name
electrical . ns of + aa 190-aee ruler $7—Dirk
measurement 73— Wipes ou ic! 100—Com pass point
T 21—Turkish 75—Slanted 140—Admonish 102—Supercilious
regiment 77—Without end 141—Chairs person
22—At this place 78—Foild 143—Small shoo expression 106—Algerian
23—Retreat 80— Make amends oy ik yg abbr.) 3¢6—Harbor seaport
24—Approaching $1—Organ of sight 146—Fatt tty 38—Black 108—Civil injury
a 26— Digits $2—Bondage 148—Stuc 40—Great Lake 112—Abound
28—Tardy £4—Creeps 1560— Narrow 41—Girl’s name 113—Unruly child
e 29—W ithout end $6— Seesaw stretch of 43—Existed 114—Ceremony
(contr.) #7—Kind of dog water 45—Three- 116—Headiland
30—Transgres- $9—Chinese 152—Singing voice cornered sail 118—Disorder
sions pagoda (pL. 46—Cautiously 120—Sugar-and-
82—Small valleys 92— Beer mug 153—Solar disk 47—Chimney nuts cake
33—Girl’s name $6—Weody plants 154—Sewing box carbon 121— Plot
34—Tierra del $8—Humorists 1566— Metal tip 49—Broad 122—Pretentious
Fuegan Indian 99—Outline * 157—Clever 51—More evil homes
123—Depresston
. 37—Tropical fruit 1903—Spun wool 159— Wise 53—Scandinavian 125—Projectile
$9—Rodent 104—One who 160—Equals 54—Hebrew month 126—United closely
| 40—Ireland excels at 66—Corresponds to 127—Center
41—Short jacket anything DOWN 59—Gave 129—Ordinances
m 42— Winter 105— Eye closely 60—Declare 131—Second of twe
precipitation 106—Right (abbr.) 1—Decreased 61—Girl’s name 132—Lasso
44— Articles of 107—Cooled lava Mohammedan 63— Appease 133—Edible fish
e furniture 108— Temporary Pr rince (pi.) 65—Small rugs 134—Edible seeds
46—Legal order shelter 3— Using frugally 6¢7—Peer Gynt’s 136—Istle fiber
7—Cook slowly 110—Cravat 4—Comb. form; mother 138—Remains at
7 48—Developed 111—A state threefold 69—College degree ease
50— Warrant (abbr.) 5—Goddess of (abbr. 140—Stage of
officer on ship 112—Spanish for discord 70—Eat too much brewing
52—Temporary “three” Exclamation 72—Bobbin (pl.) procedure
eds 113— Alcoholic —Man’s 74—Conjunction 141—Stalk
58—French article beverage nickname 7%é—Faroe Islands 142—Bristle
55—Stumble 115—Symbo! for tin 8—Foray whirlwind 144—Hold riveted
57—Symbol for 117—Entrance . ¥—Mosque tower 77—Each in attention
niton 119--Symbol for 10—Bed linen 79—Burmese tribe 147—Parent
58—Old times cerium 11— Possessive 83—Siamese unit (collog.)
59—Malaysian 120—Edible seeds ronoun of currency 148— Music:
canoe 121—Forecast 12—Bitter vetch 86—Triangular as written
60—Part of 124—Edge 13—Prefix: down pieces of wood 149—FExcavated
“to be” 126—Singing bird 14—Glen 86—Hue 151—Mature
: 127—Clothed 15—Greek letter 87—Boot peliy i 3
62—High 128—Hanging 16—Understate- ony 153—Near
mountain ornament ment by denial %8—Size of type 155—That is
64—Kind of cheese 1230—Labor of opposite 89—Note of scale (abbr.)
wm 1s ie FIT
(For this week’s solution, turn the next page)
aeatrtres hae T @
iFe<? ~
By TOM SCANLAN
6ogN THERE,” as we old time cats used to phrase it in
our salad days (when Basie REALLY had a band), is
where trombonist J. J. Johnson almost always is. Most
recent proof of the groove-dwell-
ing nature of J. J.’s horn is a very
swinging LP called “First Place”
(Columbia 1030). As the hep will
know, the title refers to J. J.’s
habit of winning the trombone
chair in most jazz polls.
This is one of the best records
Johnson has ever made, I think.
He is backed by bassman Paul
Chambers, pianist Tommy Flana-
gan and drummer Max Roach.
Roach is in very fine form, mean-
ing quieter than usual. From the
opener, a persistently - exciting
romp through “It’s Only a Paper
Moon,” through to the final band
on the other side, this LP makes
it. Tunes include Cry Me a
River, That Tired Routine Called
Love, Be My Love, a blues, and
several originals.
. 7. .
BASIE IN LONDON (Verve LP
8199) is the newest record by The
Count. It was taped before an
enthusiastic audience during the
Basie band’s recent London tour
which excited a good many people
including Princess Margaret who
apparently is no square.
In general, the record is further
proof that the current Basie band
achieves (more or less) through
sheer power and gusto what the
old Basie band achieved through
rhythmic subtleties and superb
soloists. Surely, insofar as soloists
are concerned, the Basie band to-
day can’t begin to compare with
the one which included Pres,
Evans, Clayton, Edison, Dicken-
son, and a good many other pros.
On the other hand, the present
band is better organized, slicker,
and perhaps more overpowering.
In any event, the Basie band still
swings.
Although I have certain reser-
vations about the Count’s present
band, the applause for every num-
ber on this set is understandable.
One of the highlights, for me, is
“Flute Juice” featuring Frankie
Wess.
— s +
THE JAZZPICKERS is a delight-
ful new LP featuring a quintet
including cello and flute (Em-
Arcy MG 36111). Harry Babasin
is leader of the group and his piz-
zicato cello solos are excellent.
Buddy Collette, a versatile and
highly skilled musician, is the flute
player. Tunes include I'll Remem-
ber April, I Married An Angel,
Yardbird Suite, Don’t Worry About
Me and Clap Hands — Here-Comes
Charlie. Lots of kicks to be had
from this reeord and I recommend
it highly.
*
CHARLIE ‘MINGUS, a superior
bassman, is perhaps best known
now as an avant-garde composer
and arranger. If your jazz does
not have to be “happy” jazz, you
might enjoy his latest record,
“The Clown” (Atlantic LP 1260).
The title selection.— it is not a
“tune” — is narrated by Jean
Shepherd, the “night people” disc
jockey in New York. “The Clown”
deals with a performer’s sardonic
discovery of how to make people
laugh. It’s worth hearing.
The other Mingus compositions
here also claim to tell stories,
Mingus being one who is devoted
to the idea that music tells stories.
But I wonder if such “stories,”
or “feelings” or “hates” are inher-
ent in the music itself. Hear the
record and judge for yourself.
Incidentally, on the liner notes
talented writer Nat Hentoff in one
sentence draws a kind of analogy
betweeh William Butler Yeats’
Crazy Jane, William Blake, Lead-
belly, and Mingus. Like much of
the music here, I surely don’t know
quite what to make of that. Wil-
liam Blake and Leadbelly?
* wv +
VETERANS Red Allen, Cole-
man Hawkins, J. C. Higginbotham
and Cozy Cole are featured on a
session type set (Ride, Red, Ride
in Hi-Fi, RCA Victor LP 1509).
Red’s gutty horn has its moments
and Hawk is movingly eloquent at
times. A fine Sweet Lorraine is
included and Ain’t She Sweet is
revived with gusto. Major com-
plaint I have about this set is the
inclusion of an amplified guitar
playing rhythm. A straight guitar
would have been much, much
better.
- ~ .
JAZZ WEST COAST, Vol. III,
features a variety of combos that
have recorded for the Pacific Jazz
label (Jazz West Coast LP 507).
Performers include such as Gerry
Mulligan, Chico Hamilton, Bud
Shank, Art Pepper, Chet Baker
and Jim Hall. “Brother Can You
Spare A Dime” is a real boot as
played. by tenor man Bill Perkins.
For modern jazz enthusiasts, this
set is a good buy.
After Retirement
- ++ what?
An old established company serv-
ing the U.S. and Hawaii needs men
capable of higher earning — we
have several openings at the pres-
ent time—in many cases you can
select the area in which you want
to live. Write for full information.
Box 1105, ARMY TIMES PUB. CO.
2020 M St., N.W., Wash. 6, D.C.
OCTOBER 19, 1957
ARMY TIMES 23
POP RECORDS (OF PERMANENT INTEREST)
New Vocal Sides Worth a Spin
UYLAINE GUY, a very attractive young
lady according, to the picture on the cover
of her LP called “French Doll,” .croons a
dozen French songs with the kind of appropriate
“je ne sais quoi” appeal designed to appease the
opposite sex (RCA Victor 1500). Even if you don’t
understand her language, there is no mistaking
her point. Sings in tune, too.
- t -
JIMMY KOMACK, known primarily for his work
in “Damn Yankees,” has cut his first.LP and it’s a
real good one (RCA Victor LP 1501). Kornack has
a no-nonsense approach to a song, a good voice, and
he also has the wisdom to sing fine but seldom-heard
standards such as Button Up Your Overcoat, You’re
the Cream in My Coffee, Love Is Just Around the
Corner and Jeepers Creepers.
7” ” -
_ THE MILLS BROTHERS prove they still have
that old harmonic soft-shoe kind of magic “One
Dozen Roses.” Ros.s of Picardy and Mighty“Zak’ A
Rose come off especially well (Decca LP 8491).
- o *
JIMMY DURANTE fans will want “Club Durant”
(Decca LP 9049). It’s a collection of selections from
radio broadcasts. The famed Clayton, Jackson and
Durante trio is in good form and Jimmy is also heard
with guest stars Al Jolson, Sophie Tucker, Ethel
Barrymore, Bing Crosby, Helen’ Traubel, Bob Hope,
Eddie Cantor and. Peter Lawford.
7 7” .
EDDIE CANTOR is back on record, too. These
‘are new recordings, not a collection of reissues or
broadcast tapes, and the 65-year-old Banjo Eyes still
sings with customary spark. It’s called “The Best
of Eddie Cantor” (Vik LX-1119). Songs include
ones closely associated with Cantor such as If You
Knew Susie, Makin’ Whoopee, How Ya Gonna Keep
"Em Down on the Farm and Margie.
7 7 ”
ELSA LANCHESTER talk-sings her witty way
through a dozen funny old ballads, some slightly
brawd, on “Songs for a Smoke-Filled Room” (HIFI
LP R-405). Introductions are by husband Charles
Laughton. The gifted music hall commedienne sings
such as If You Peek In My Gazebo, The Ratcatcher’s
Daughter, Please Sell No More Drink to My Father
and Fiji Fanny.
* 7 co.
THE WINGED VICTORY CHORUS, under the
direction of Joe Baris with an orchestra conducted
by Neal Hefti, includes a dozen sin; »ble, hummable
and whistleable songs performed, without any gim-
micks, by the colorful Winged Victory Chorus.
The precision singing ensemble came to be
known as the Winged Victory Chorus because it was
the nickname of the Glee Club of the now famous
43d Division. The name was acquired in 1945 when
the outfit took part, under Gen. Wing, in the vic-
torious assault on the Philippines. Upon discharge
from the Army, the men of the chorus went their
separate ways until Joe Baris, not satisfied with the
life of a high schoo] music teacher, revived a smaller
edition of the group in 1954
edie
~ DEPE
ie rweath er 01
ey Ml
>
S
¢
S
e When leave time comes, don’t take a
chance on travel delays—take the train!
In any weather you get where you are
going when you travel by train. You
leave on schedule, travel on schedule,
RAL
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and arrive on schedule as planned. And
you just can’t beat the comfort and
services on a fast, modern train.
* So save time and money...avoid
unnecessary delays—(ake the train!
Reduced fares when on leave
special discounts on Transportation Requests
Ask about Family Fares
oes OF THE UNITED STATES
The Best Buy— BUY TRAIN!
24 ARMY TIMES
OCTOBER 19, 1957
Strictly Staff Stuff
This week by...
Macon Reed
Experiments With Dice
ATHEMATICIANS have made many experiments with
dice, but the most instructive one of all has yet to
be performed. It wouldn’t require much skill or much
equipment. Any apprentice machinist could probably do it.
All it requires is to throw dice or one die would be enough —
in exactly the same way several times. Not approximately the same
way; exactly the same way., The human hand can’t do it! that’s been
tried. ‘A bit of machinery is needed.
If upon being thrown several times in precisely the same way
the die rolls the same number each time, we will know that dice obey
natural law; that they are compelled to do what they do by the same
kind of law that takes your bullet to the target if you aim the gun
properly.
» * a7
BUT SUPPOSE that upon being propelled a dozen times with
exactly the same force, in exactly the same direction, to land at
exactly the same spot on the table — suppose the die turns up its
usual senseless string of different numbers. This would prove what
many experienced men believe, that dice are independent, unac-
quainted with the law of cause and effect and goverred only by a
special law of no law.
The ancients called this no-law by the name of Fors Fortuna, a
lady god that scientists have recently discovered among the atoms
and have dug up and dusted off and re-diefied and commenced to
worship respectably under the name of the Heisenberg Principle of
Uncertainty.
The principle says roughly that there’s no telling what an atom
may do,
Can the same be said of dice?
Try the experiment. Seat the die cn a small lever arm of
see-saw. Drop a weight on the other end so as to flip the die into
flight. On the next toss, seat it with the same face up; drop the
same weight from exactly the same height.
Want to bet the die rolls the same number each time? Or that it
won't?
- * .
I WON’T TAKE YOU either way, and I have long since made the
last of my dice experiments. Most of them were not philosophical
but aimed at finding an unbeatable system. Of such infallible sys-
tems I have invented or been privy to at least five, but only one of
them worked.
1. Quite young, I fell upon the notion of starting with the small-
est bet (25c it was, and the houseman smiled as | put it down) and
simply doubling the next time if you lost. Keep doubling, and sooner
or later you are bound to win.
Of this system I was very proud, for about 15 minutes.
2. Years later a friend of mine in the Army named Sparks
brought me into secretive experiments with even-rolling. Set the
dice just so in your hand. Throw them so that each turns over exactly
the same number of times as the other. They will seven every time.
Two difficulties developed in practice: Neither he nor I (nor
anyone else, I suspect) could roll with the right precision; and in a
crap game people always make you bump the dice against something.
3. I discovered (what every gambler knows) that in a friendly
game where there is no house the man that fades has a shaved minor
fraction of one percent odds in his favor against the shooter.
If I passed the dice each time they came to me, and always bet
against the shooter, I would win in the long vun. Bound to win.
It might have worked if I could have stayed awake. But I
was betting a dollar at a time and the monotony lulled. Once or
twice an hour my attention would wander and I would fail to pick
up a dollar won. The sleep factor a little more than neutralized my
percentage.
The total result was a slow loss. There are worse systems.
4. A magazine said you could influence a die by shaving an im-
perceptible thousandth of an inch from an edge. It didn’t say what
edge had what influence.
But I like to be practical and mechanical and figure things out.
Now, let’s see... If you scrape the number face dewn, keeping it
square and flat, you will slightly reduce the area of sides. Two,
three, four and five.
Side six, being opposite to one, stays the same.
The die would tend to come to rest more often on the most
spacious sides — wouldn’t you think so? — which would mean that
numbers Six and One would show up most often ... Or would it be
the other way round?
Never mind. A little practical experimenting would show.
Can’t rely too heavily on theory in a matter like this.
I bought a handful of cheap dice and a nail file, sat down on the
floor and started rolling. Jean kept score in a notebook, saying it was
the dullest crap game she’s ever been in
A gentle filing aimed at achieving a subtle influence had no effect
at all on the way the dice acted. Neither did a little more filing.
I filed faces down to where the spots were gone; and I filed
edges down to where they became extra faces. But square or muti-
lated, the die rolled all its numbers in merry abundance and none
more often than another, as far as I could tell.
This destroyed my faith even in crooked dice. True, I never tried
loading; but I’d be surprised if it worked. Dice invented perfect un-
certainty five thousand years before Heisenberg, as far as I’m con-
cerned,
The system that did work, you ask?
Oh, yes. Sparks invented it.
“The hell with what the dice do,” he weuld say, “I grab the
money. Mostly I have to give it back and apologize fast, but you’d
be surprised how many sleepers I catch in a long game,”
He walked out of a four-year war $10,000 winners,
How We Get That Green
(Continued from 1st Feature Pg.)|their ball fly, didn’t they? Of
ee ae
- | course it'll fly, especially if we use
carefully. It resembled a bowling leuneilaan ol
ball, and on it was engraved, in |™*
Russian; ‘Red Star Publishing Co.
Monday Night Bowling League,
; Game, Antony Marchski,
954.’
NICKSON: - What’s the’ signifi-
cance of it?
BLACK: Beats hell out of me.
1 move that since we don’t know
how it got there, we don’t bother
telling the President about it.
(There followed some secret dis-
cussion, involving bowling figures,
and the motion was passed unani-
mously.—Editor )
NICKSON: Maybe we should
include in our report that in-
formation about the bartender in
Eureka, California, who invented
a Sputnik cocktail. One drink,
and you leap for the moon. Two
drinks and you go beep-beep.
GARD: Yes, the President would
like to know about that. We'll in-
clude that.
BLACK: What about the status
of the green cheese?
NICKSON: That’s a pretty touchy
question, loaded with politics. I
was hoping we could avoid it, but
it looks like we can’t.
GARD: What do you recommend
Verny?
BLACK: Well, when our first
manned space ship reaches the
moon, and loads all the empty fuel
bins with the moon’s green cheese,
it will cause a severe depression
in the Wisconsin cheese industry.
NICKSON: Maybe the govern-
ment could subsidize the Milwau-
kee White Sox...
GARD: Braves...
NICKSON: ... all right, Braves,
so that they can have a World
Series every year. This should com-
pensate them for their cheese
losses.
BLACK: That’s a political ques-
tion out of our sphere, you should
pardon the expression, and we
shouldn’t take a stand on it.
GARD: Agreed.
NICKSON: How about if we
just tried to claim Sputnik for
our own? Maybe we could plug
a popular song which, repeated
endlessly on radio and television,
would convince Americans that
the Russian satellite really was
launched by us.
NICKSON: Forget the whole
thing.
BLACK: Now, to get to the radio
part, I have an old table model set
I'd be willing to donate to the
satellite.
GARD: What do we need a radio
for, using up all that space. Sup-
pose we put a cricket in there, who
would know the difference?
NICKSON: If we used a cricket,
we’d have enough room to load the
thing with a big batch of ice cream
mix. The way the satellite will
spin, and the way it gets so cold
up there...
GARD: Ice cream in a satellite
is ridiculous. The cricket is okay,
we'll recommend that, but no ice
cream.
NICKSON: Have we decided on
a name for our satellite, when we
finally get it up there?
BLACK: The boys down at
Huntsville promised it would fly,
if they could only get it away from
the Navy.
GARD: But it’s only a little
round ball...
NICKSON: The Russians made
CROSSWORD SOLUTION
Sit HIAIR H aag3
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BLACK: Which is. . .
;
EF
si
GARD: Feller is retired now,
John.
NICKSON: Use Lew Burdette,
or Whitey Ford. Any of those guys
could launch it.
GARD: How about floating
lee eR ee meg”
ev sre oe OS
GARD: It beeps.
Who needs more beeps?
GARD: It must be of some use.
Why did the Russians do it?
BLACK: I don’t know.
GARD: Neither do I.
NICKSON: Sup we recom-
mend to the President that. . .~
(At this point, the recording
tape ran out.—Editor)
ES —5 oe we
(> rt ae.
tn Be 4 c AA
T
“4
/
a Ee. ae ae ee On ©
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Reprint from Mid Continent Jeweler.
Top illus. enlarged to show deted
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months sterting December 1, 1957.
Signature
5 South Wabash, Chicago 3, Ill.
Please send the following Registered Perfecut Diamond (
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NICKSON: What good is that? —
= ee Sr fs Se See lk i
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¥ -
TRAVEL
Ag ee es
New Eastern Service
Makes Total of Eight
Offering Latin Tours
By FRANKLIN G. SMITH
Travel
Editor
NOX of our neighborg have grown closer to us—especially
travelwise—in recent years than Mexico. This is most
noticeable and most mie how
been below the border. There
to everybody who lately has
s a zest down there, most re-
flective in the hustle and bustle of
Mexico City, that might well pass
for New York, Chicago, San Fran-
cisco or even the racy city of Rio
de Janeiro.
Also showing
a great deal of
new animation
is the enchant-
ing country of
Guatemala, The
capital of Guate-
ed seat
Spanish grandeur,
coming
are
more and more into the Latin
tourist picture..
One does not have to look far
for the real cause of the travel
popularity of the two countries.
Basically it is ideal all-year climate,
unsurpassed scenery, genial people,
excellent hotels, good roads and
the best of air, rail and ship serv-
ices and exceptionally low prices.
tourists
facilities, perhaps the leading fac-
tor in bringing both and
Guatemala closer to the American
ile
Shop
FREE Car To Use Wh
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Dial 1500 and listen to the best in
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* 7:10-7:15 AM
6:35-6:40 PM
7:00-7:05 PM
11:20-11:25 PM
12:55-1:00 PM
5:00-5:05 PM
DAN DANIELS
ARCH McDONALD
HERMAN HICKMAN
DAN DANIELS
JOE Foss**
JOE Foss**
on WTOP RADIO Monday thru Saturday.)
(Presented
**Saturday only.
BASEBALL by the ORIOLES when scheduled.
astern
ARMY TIMES — NAVY TIMES — AIR FORCE TIMES
Section'|R
NEW YORK
OCTOBER 19, 1957
El
travel markets have been the air-
lines,
Just recently Eastern Air Lines
entered the Mexican tourist arena
with two superb services, one a
non-stop operation between New
York and Mexico City. The other,
a direct service from New York,
Washington and New Orleans to
the Mexican Capital.
The new service makes a total
of eight trunk lines operating be-
tween the U. S., Canada, Cuba,
Central America and Mexico, D. F.
The lines are: Pan American World
Airways, American Airlines, Air
France, Trans Canada, Cubana and
two of Mexico’s own lines, Aero-
naves de Mexico, and the popular
Guest Airways that provides fast
services between Miami, Fila.,
Windsor, Detroit, Panama, Guate-
mala and the Mexican capital.
All of the lines are featuring
some sort of all expense tour or
(See AIRLINES, Next Page)
FLORIDA
Per Person
double Occ.
TO DEC. 20th ;
100% AIR-CONDITIONED
Centrally Heated
Pool on Premises @ Solaria @
Coffee @ Dining Terrace
@ Luxurious Rooms with Radio
some with a @ Private
Beach Facilities
@ PARKING FACILITIES *
For Color Brochure & Reservations
Write, wire or e
Miami Beach JEfferson 8-732!
COLLINS AVENUE at 26th STREET
A
Uy *3
Person
y Travel Agent or Write
, im
PI
West 49th STREET bet.
BWAY and RADIO CITY
\ 7
VISIT
NEW YORK
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NEW
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Walking Distance to Radio
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and Restaurants. Accom-
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SPECIAL ARMED
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Contact your Local
Circle 7-8100
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ymout
th
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and more than 40 other cities in Kentucky, North Carolina, Ohio,
wy South Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia and West Virginia.
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las Vegas
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Braniff serves over
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BOTH first class and aircoach accommoda-
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General Offices: Delies, Texes
| BRANIFFécx-AIRWAYS
COMFORT
trip |
PIII IIIT) eeesesece
E2 EASTERN SECTION
OCTOBER 19, 1957
Ambassador for “58
Called ‘Hot Performer’
By FRANK MUNRO
Ts not-unexpected death of two famous: automobiles has
finally occurred. Nash and Hudson have been replaced
as the senior cars in the American Motors lineup by a new
Rambler Ambassador model.
Ambassadors will use essentially
the same body as 1958 Rambler
six-cylinder and Rebel V-8 models
but will be longer and more power-
ful, have distinctive grilles and
other styling features.
The new models will be
mounted on 117-inch wheelbases,
nine inches longer than standard
Rambiers. Ambassadors _ will
also be nine inches longer over-
all. Height is the same, 58
inches, for both lines.
Powerplants for the new cars
will be higher horsepower version
of the 327-cubic-inch V-8 used in
1957 Nashes, Hudsons and the
super-stock Rambler Rebels. A
new four-barrel carburetor design
and an increase in compression
ratio from 9-to-1 to 9.7-to-1 has
raised horsepower from 255 to 270.
This will make these cars hot
performers. They weigh only
slightly more than the very fast
1957 Rebels and the extra horses
will more than make up for the
additional poundage. Since Rebels
last year could get from 0-60 mph
in less than eight seconds when
equipped with manual gearbox, you
can realize that new Ambassadors
should go!
Dual headlamps and neat lattice-
work grilles made of extruded
aluminum highlight very attractive
front end styling. Flaring rear
fender fins are accentuated by side
body moldings outlining textured
aluminum trim inserts.
Suspension is by coil springs at
all four wheels. A new torsion-
type stabilizer bar is linked be-
tween front suspension lower con-
trol arms to restrict body roll and
sway in turns.
Unitized body-frame construction
Folder Offered
On Philadelphia
The attractions of “Philadelphia
in the Fall” are cited in a pamph-
let issued by the City Representa-
tive’s Office.
The folder, contains dates and
times for more than 100 sports
events, musical programs and other
attractions.
Free copies are available from
the Mayor’s Office for Informa-
tion & Complaints, Room 121
City Hall, Philadelphia 3, Pa.
Near The Pentagon}
Semtnary Valley
ALEXANDRIA, VIRGINIA
4% Bedroom Cape Cod—2 fe Baths
Baths
30 YR. LOANS AT 41/2%
VA, FHA In-Service and
Conventional Financing Available
Hag Full Basement; Deluxe “‘Bullt-
Oven and Counter Top Range Units;
Natural Wood Kit. Cabinets; Many, Many
Extras, $19,250 te $20,950.
FROM WASHINGTON: Out Shirley
Highway to Seminary Road inter
ghange, Left on Seminary Road te
North Van Dorn Street. Right on
North Van Dorn &t. to Taney
Avenue. Left on Taney Ave. Past
Brookville atham st. Right
on Latham &t. to end of street
& model homes.
WRITE FOR FREE FOLDER
RICHMARR CONSTRUCTION 00.
123 §. Fairfax $t., Alexandria, Ve.
King $-4868
is, of course, used and all Ambas-
sadors will be protected from
corrosion by .having their bodies
submerged completely in a tank
of rust-resistant primer.
Transmissions available in-
clude standard three-speed stick
shift, overdrive and a new auto-
matic transmission being built
for AM by Borg-Warner,
A limited-slip differential, power
brakes, power windows and power-
lift windows, plus a variable-speed
engine fan which is quieter and
requires less power to operate, are
among the options offered. Re-
clining seats which convert to beds
are standard on Custom models,
optional for Supers.
All Ambassadors, including sta-
tion wagons, are four-door models.
A sedan and a station wagon are
offered in the Super series. Sedaas,
station wagons, hardtop sedans and
hardtop wagons are offered in the
Custom series.
Airlines Offer Varied Latin Tours
(Continued from Preceding Page)
other to Mexico and Guatemala.
There is one that enables you
to visit Mexico City, Guatemala
City and Yucatan in a full two-
week vacation:
For example, a four-day Mexico
City vacation costs $26.00 plus air
fare, including double room with
bath, guided motor tour of Mexico
City and transfer both ways be-
tween airport and hotel.
For $99 you can enjoy 10 days
in land of the Aztecs, including
a two-day visit to Taxco, a tour of
Cuernavaca and the Floating Gar-
dens of Xochimilco and a three-day
trip to the famous seaside resort
of Acapulco.
On your sightseeing tour you'll
visit the Palace of Fine Arts;
Mexico’s ornate marble opera house
with its famous glass curtain; the
National Palace with frescoes by
Diego Rivera; the Castle of Chap-
ultepec at the end of Paseo de la
| PARTAIN, INC.
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Reforma, the fifth aie ae
Mexico; and the Basilica of Our
Lady of Guadalupe, a shrine to the
patroness of Mexico.
Just south of Mexico is Guate-
mala, a land of magnificent moun-| and Guatemala vacations write
tain scenery and volcanoes, beauti-| te the Army Times Exchange,
ful lakes, and tropical coastal areas.| 2020 M St., N.W., Washington 6,
Geceianls: tus dovtlned by 18
| _Wobite HOMES GUIDE :
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USRY MOBILE HOMES
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WHY PAY RENT?.
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MOBILE HOME SALES
(ROUTE 40) PULASKI HG’WY
ABERDEEN, MD.
(Midway Between Baltimore,
Maryland & Wilmington, Del.)
SAY YOU SAW IT
IN THE TIMES
ht Home Buys For Servicemen
DOWN PAYMENTS
STEAD OF RENTING,
TANT EAST COAST CITIES.
THESE HOMES REPRESENT THE AREA’S BEST BUYS, WITH LOW
SERVING NEAR THE NATION’S CAPITAL AND OTHER IMPOR. |
AND F.H.A. IN-SERVICE FINANCING. IN-
INVEST IN YOUR OWN HOME WHILE
Need Housing in NORFOLK, VA,?
See us or let us know your needs before arriving.
Two offices to serve you.
TRUITT REALTY CORP.
Central Office
214 West York St. or
311 E. Little Creek Rd.
Norfolk, Va.
IMMEDIATE
Coming
To FOR FURTHER
Norfolk? =
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MEMBER NATIONAL HOME BUILDERS ASSN.
See Our Beautiful 3-Bedroom Homes
As Low As 2% Down Payment
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Another W. D. Hobbs, Development
Over 50 yrs. bidg, experience.
OCCUPANCY
INFORMATION CALL or WRITE
Phone JU 7-5469
the features you want ..
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ot @ Three large bedrooms
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MILITARY HIGHWAY of LITTLE CREEK OAD, NORFOLK, VIRGINIA
MVstice 8-5436
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COMING TO WASHINGTON?
IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY ~
RENT
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BUY
BROOKVILLE
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3 Bedrooms, 2 Tile Baths
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Vets=—MONTHLY PAYMENTS: Approx,
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OTE:
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BROOKVILLE | °vos'sc cso
$042 Taney Avenue, Alexandria, Va., FL 4-9400° “FL 4-9402
eovre mee oO. 3 See | OE
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| RED COCR OO OA AO4O 6 OOOO C COCOONS >>> Sree 6 OS
\ ae”
~
es
ROOMS,
MEALS, TRAVEL
Diner's Club — Worldwide Credit
OCTOBER 19,
1957
EASTERN SECTION E8
for Military Members
a Manhattan serenade is a siren song for some 70,000 oo p= aren xR, in adage da
# servicemen a week who, according to the U.S:0. flock to ola ‘ resident's ‘owers Htl* | Tony’s Italian Ktchn 1 e
, 2 saat China Press Box Sherry’ To
Gotham on pass or furlough. Several thousand more spend a | 2!¢ Homestead Prince George Hotel Shine’s Restaurant Towa Howse O’seas Ser vices
few days between trains and planes, before embarking for | ae English Grille, Sixty Eight Vanderbit Hotel Overseas service available
Europe or after coming down the Pappas Pygmalion Stk Hse Stampler’s Filet Viennese Lantern nee . bn Diner’s cub =
an Mignon
gangplank from an overseas tour.) House Monsignere Pateicia ‘Murphy's | Red Carpet Qiniie Btemeter’s || Vitae Vennaort we g : e 0 eke ~m ude
This equivalent of five full Army | Marine's a y Renato Stark’s Pearl St. | Vogue Room ar rental; theater ticket; liquor;
: Pe Park Italian Rest Rendesvous Rest srnaeteurent Pa Vette . sightseeing services; gift shops;
divisions buys a quarter of a mil| ear" "=| Mergen's Rest, Rickey's Stampler's) Walsh's Steak House || Might clubs; hotels, moiels; gas
lion meals daily in the big city in ow pe ght. Food Sensioe ‘Sines Seo | Soke et Bouse Warwick Hotel | | and oil; tours; native handi-
between visits to the shows, night es one Eile Sempens, Dosteunant Rosetti’s 400 Rest | Sun Luck Rest Weylin Restaurant || Cfafts; hunting and fishing trips;
ae otis Weeiat Mayan New Show Room uater ee | Gate Bes’: Boo ae hay eB White Turkey Rest |! cruises,; you can even rent a
clubs, museums and — peers sat Hotel, Cotil- | Russian Tea Room | Tavern on the Wivel plane and charge it in England
attractions. Weenane Salon Wnceen — | eee coe oe Ve Olde Dutch or rent a yacht fully equipped
Many of them shy away from | Miremar Nine’s Continental | Polka Dot Rest | Schwartrs "| qenersm, + San Pow,
wartz’s ree Crowns Zucca’s
carrying cash in the city and
they have gone in heavily for
credit cards particularly in The
Diner’s Club. This Club is a
fantastic operation offering its
one half million members charge
facilities in more than 15,000
stores, hotels and services in 76
different countries.
The Diner’s Club boasts that a
person can circle the globe using
“ghips, trains and planes, restau-
rants, hotels, gift shops, rent a car,
go night clubbing and even take
an African Safari (cost up to
$60,000) all without using a dollar
in cash and all charged on his
Diner’s Club Credit Card.
The serviceman coming to New
York for a day, week or month
may charge his meals (and in some
cases his hotel room) throught the
Diner’s Club if he is a member.
And he won’t lack for variety—the
following lists over 300 New York
Restaurants which are members of
the Diner’s Club which means that
the quality and cleanliness have
been checked and approved by the
Club.
The asterisk refers to those
hotels where the room may also
AT HOME IN YOUR OWN CITY
...OR ABROAD
YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD
WHEREVER YOU GO
WHEN YOU CARRY A
VWt1s Old, card!
ALL YOU NEED IS YOUR DINER’S CLUB CARD
and a pencil to sign and say “Charge It” at the
more than 14,000 recommended Diners’ Club establishments
all over the world.
In your own home city, touring the country, traveling
abroad, entertaining for business or pleasure . . .carry one
card and receive just one monthly statement of charges
itemized so that no business expense is overlooked
Bookkeeping records are simplified with no petty cash
be charged oft the Diner’s Club nuisance—ne vouchers to sign. Your own accountant will
pa > verify this as A VALUABLE RECORD FOR TAX PURPOSES
Adams Hotel* Couture Rent A Car ONE CARD—ONE STATEMENT—ONE CHECK
Admiral
Al Cooper's Herald
Sq
Al & Dick’s Stk Hse
Algonquin Hotel*
Al Schacht Dorset Hotel
Amalfi Restaurant Down Under Rest
Anchor Downey’s Steak Hse VIP treatment everywhere. The Diners’ Club
Antlers Drake Hotel Charge Establishments and Services include the
Armando’s Drury Lane ‘
world’s finest RESTAURANTS, HOTELS, NIGHTCLUBS;
Assembly Rest
Avenue Restaurant
Baccara of Vienna |
Bal Tabarin Eden Roc Club | the glant HERTZ AUTO RENTAL SYSTEM;
Baronet Editorial Rest PACKAGE LIQUOR STORES, FLORISTS and GIFT SHOPS;
Beau Brummel Rest
Beaux Arts Apts.* El Chico
Bedford Hotel* El Morocco ether extras. The Diners’ Club gift service offers Gift Certificates
Beef & Bourbon Embers : ; a oak .
* Beefeater Jack Dempsey’s and gifte te cover every occasion. Temporary office help and
Belmont Plaza Hti* Jack's other business aids are available through MANPOWER, INC.
Berkshire Hotel
Bill Bertolotti’s
Bill’s Gay Nineties
Bird ’N Glass
am pera Sehnig telenene The Diners’ Club Card is your credit “‘passport”’ that
Bourbon Street Charcoal Room eases travel problems and insures red carpet treatment in the
as Green rd pel ges U.3.A. and 72 foreign countries. Your Diners’ Club Card
replaces money, but doesn’t carry the same hazard
Brevoort Rest
Byline Room
Cabin Grill (Major’s)
Cadillac Restaurant
Cafe Chauveron
Cafe Louis KIV
Cafe Nine
Captain’s Table
Carlyle Hotei
Casanova
be » i, > benefits—so many extras. Additional membership
Gaus Le Cupidon cards issued to family or other executives on the same
Chandler’s Left Bank account, cost only $2.50 per card.
Chapeau Rouge
as
Chateau Madrid
Curb Restaurant
Cyrano’s
Daniel Restaurant
Delmonico Rest*
Doria Restaurant
Dunhall’s |
Eberhardt’s House |
El Borracho
Jager House
Janssen Graybar
Jerry’s Steak House
Jimmy Smith’s Stk
Keen’s Chop House
King of the Sea
Kismet Restaurant
L’Aiglon
LaMer
LaPetite Maison
La Potiniere
LaScala Italian Rest |
Laurent
LaZambra
Le Marmiton
Le Provencal
professional people,.and travelers now carry
the wallet-sized Diners’ Club Card instead of
dozens of credit cards and enjoy preferred
the CONGRESS OF MOTOR HOTELS group;
a network of GASOLINE STATIONS.
The BEVERAGE GIFT SERVICE enables you to send liquor
on an interstate basis. The DINERS’ CLUB MAGAZINE
features articles by famed travel authorities and gourmets
BECOME A MEMBER OF THE DINER’S CLUB
All this eredit, convenience, and prestige costs you
or your firm just $5 a year
More than 500,000 business executives,
and a host of many
of loss or theft that money does,
YOU CAN‘T AFFORD NOT TO
a modest fee indeed for so many
Le Trianon °
Cherry Lane {as Pyrennes, : DINERS’ CLUB Empire State Bldg., New York 1, N.Y.
Cher Carts Lib’ Ovster ae THIS 18 YOUR APPLICATION \ fit name eee
Ghee Vito” Little Venice -+-FILL OUT AND MAIL TODAY B hee ates ine J ie
—” Stk Hse pt Armand TO THE DINERS’ CLUB OFFICE > home phone rent home own home years
ieee “i ao EERE HOR: : _ , Zz
Copain Manny Wolf's Chep — pany name nature of business. slisieatite
addr city. —
Guide Lists All busi phone years with above firm_____position. 3 =
NEW YORK CITY (1): Empire State Bldg. bank branch requir OD
Any chance of finishing your CHICAGO (2): 33 N. La Salle St. Rasa ailniaitaan a pao B
meal, flashing your card and
then discovering that the restau-
rant isn't a member of the
Diner’s Club plan anymore? No,
says the Diner's Club. If the
restaurant is listed in the tiny
guide given members then
there’s no sweat. Even if the
eating establishment is not eur-
any a member, you do not pay
eash.
ST. LOUIS (5): 7811 Carondelet
LOS ANGELES (46): 910 N. La Cienega
CLEVELAND: 1911 Terminal Tower Bldg.
WASHINGTON, D.C. (6): Dupont Circle Bldg.
NEW ORLEANS (12); Int'l Trade Mart
SAN FRANCISCO (4): 127 Montgomery St.
CANADA: 1323 Bay St., Toronto, Ontario
if new account, check here () . .. if addition to existing account, show number
COMPANY ACCOUNT PERSONAL ACCOUNT — PERSONAL ACCOUNT
CHECK ONE ONLY » bill to office address [_] bill to office address [_] bill to home address CO
$5.00 annual membership fee: enclosed [] bili me [)
(INCLUDES DINERS’ CLUB NEWS, 1 YR. SUBSCRIPTION SIXTY CENTS)
card holder individual responsibility with company applicant
10-NY-AT-2
signature of individual applicant
signature of executive
jorizing company t title >
Seeseeeeoeeeeteceeseceeeetetece
OCTOBER 19, 1957
E4 EASTERN SECTION
+ coun o77 FREE
SO EMLAUL ESTIMATES
*.
° ND baInt Work ee ERIC
@ AUTOMATIC CARD
Roe S INT: pervay attene
* AND ADJUSTED ro 293% FREE CAR
ALL WORK FULLY BULMaSS iS to drive while
GUARANTEED GAS and OIL yours is in
the
Special Discounts to Servicemen
AUTO REPAIR CITY inc.
1017 N. Capitol Street—Wesh., D.C.—ST 3-0795
NEW and USED CARS NEW and USED CARS
ENTIRE
INVENTORY
for the month of October—every car sold
‘25 ABOVE-
COST
Ask about FREE
4 transportation from
m any East Coast Base
BRAND NEW ‘57 CATALINA HARDTOPS
Hydramatic, Radio, Heater & Defroster, Turn Signals, Oil Bath Air
Cleaner, Full Flow Filter, Foam Cushion
Fully Equipped—All Makes & Models
‘229.
34,000 miles, 3-Yr.
Guarantee, Bank
Rates—Spot Deliv-
<M ery.
407-427 FLA. AVE., , WASH., D.C.
CALL Li < 7200
CALL FOR FREE COURTESY CAR
UPON ARRIVAL IN D. C.
=e
Doss Disses L0
PROUDLY ANNOUNCES THE OPENING OF THEIR NEW AND EXTENSIVE
Imported & Sports Car Annex
Jaguars © Healys © MGs © Porsche @ Corvettes © T-Birds and a
BRAND NEW SHIPMENT OF VOLKSWAGENS ’58 THRU ’53 at
DISCOUNT PRICES
OFFICERS absolutely NO CASH NEEDED!
First Three Grades as low as $195 Down on Approved Credit
NAME YOUR OWN TERMS
write or call for more information
ROSS DISCOUNT LTD.
10th & New York Ave., N.W. Washington, D. C. DI 7-88°8 a
b - CADILLAC ELDORADO
WASHINGTON’S LARGEST VOLUME INDEPENDENT DEALER!!
BOB Wi LSON
rO KEEP IN LINE WITH HIS REPUTATION OF BIGGEST DISCOUNTS, EASIEST TERMS AND
FINEST QUALITY, BOB WILSON IS OFFERING THESE COLOSSAL BUYS FOR
THIS WEEK ONLY-1957 FORD
FULL PRICE
1195
"36 CHEV. 4 DR. $595 D4. FORD 4. DR. $295
736 FORD 2 DR. $695 °52 PONT. 4 DR. $195
735 MERC, CONV, $895 °51 MERC. 2 DR. $ 95
LUXURY CARS AT BARGAIN PRICES!
CHRYSLER HARDTOP °35 CADILLAC HARDTOP
ALL OF THE ABOVE ARE LOADED INCLUDING FULL POWER
READ & HEED
°97 FORD THUNDERBIRD
. ONE YEAR 100% GUARANTEE AVAILABLE. 6. CALL FOR OUR COURTESY CAR WHEN YOU
2. FINANCING & INSURANCE ARRANGED ON THE ARRIVE.
SPOT. 7. ALL MAIL INQUIRIES WELCOMED AND PROMPT-
LY REPLIED.
3. BIG DISCOUNTS FOR CASH BUYERS. 8. DON’T BE WAYLAID BY “HUSTLERS” WHO WILL
4. LOW DOWN PAYMENT & BANK FINANCING FOR TRY TO INDUCE YOU TO BUY FROM OTHER
OFFICERS & FIRST 3 GRADES. LOTS, THEY WORK ON COMMISSION WHICH
5. NO ALLOTMENT REQUIRED. iS ADDED ON TO THE PURCHASE OF THE CAR.
BOB WILSON
THE BIG LOT ON THE CORNER WITH THE BIG BOB WILSON SIGN
LOCATED ON U.S, TRUCK ROUTE NO. 1
3rd & K STs. N.W., WASHINGTON, D.C, RE 7-3333
OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. *TIL 9:30 P.M.—SUNDAY 16 A.M. TO 6 P.M.
Mi. ot. o
mae
NEW and USED CARS
NEW and USED CARS
engine was put in the rear, | narrow waist and bulbous rear end, DELUXE
enc and to} it was named “Vespa,” the Italian With reclining seats. twin travel beds,
the rear wheel, so there would be| name for wasp. Almost overnight |] Girfivte "Comstection eat road ti
e.| the success of the machine brought springs, and all the advanced features
put on small wheels|a new word into the Italian lan- |] {oyey"bect from Rambler. (w.w. tires op-
to give a better ride and make the | guage: “vespizarre’—to get some- $99 DOWN
vehicle easier to handle. — where on a Vespa.
, l | ¢ : Vespa Comes to Washington BOCH — THE BAY STATE'S LARGEST YOLUME 7
GERVICEMEN who are familiar| ing, that they try a design. Speed It was scoffed at by the first en- 4
* with abulous and power were not essential, but | gineers who saw it. They said “No 58 RAMBLERS
Or any old “ $5750 oor ie.
h
cor worth $
ain
2014 M St., N.W. Wash., D.C.
NEW and USED CARS - NEW and USED CARS No Sales Tax in Mossachusetts
SPECIAL DISCOUNTS FOR SERVICEMEN
wi The Scooter for those who commute... Come out where the overhead is low and save hundreds of dollars.
Commuters. . ReTTC ie thn Saailie aor. <. hdp: tandere THESE TERMS AVAILABLE ONLY AT:
ONLY $389 a yedieg uh Kole aula lees BOCH NASH, Norwood, Massachusetts
‘Pook WAGONS
With reclining seats twin travel beds,
direc. signals, chrome luggage rack, roll-
up rear window, rattle-free unit body
construction, One of America’s most pop-
ular wagons. (w.w. tires optional at extra
cost),
$199 overs oe $6650 rer me.
36 Mo.
car worth $199
NOrwood 7-1791
Phone: MEtropolitan 8-2466 we ee ee
( g 100 MILES TO A GALLON OF GAS! Route 1—4 Miles South of Route 128
~f3Oce.
IMPORTANT NEWS FOR SERVICEMEN
FROM COMMUNITY BUICK
ANNOUNCES
NEW POLICY
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE ...
Mr. Harry Ash and Mejor Frank ‘Bud’
Bages, AF Res., known for square deals te
4 f motor
soci that a apres rol the| economy, or md and dura- =e — — nea i
Db bility were mind. use of its flaring front end, f
sted to know that or} The *-P0OR SEDANS
= WS SWART.
— £7 Usaac sy
thousands of servicemen are ready to serve Pi
you as always... ONLY 8 MILES FROM Fak “Bud” Bages
McGUIRE AIR FORCE BASE AND FORT Bix “42ers AF Res.
+ «with Director
TOP DISCOUNTS FOR SERVICEMEN
6% INTEREST LAYAWAY PLAN
LARGE STOCK OF NEW AND USED CARS
UP TO 36 MONTHS TO PAY
Your Name, Rank & Branch SSS
of Service Engraved in Gold oa
Beautifully Finished Wood. ——
DESKPLATE 914” x 2%" =!
WITH GREEN FELT-BASE
ow,
KEN MOTOR COMPANY, INC. Open Evenings ‘Til 10 — Sundays for Inspection Only
our meee:, « rr
GOING OVERSEAS? SPECIAL PLAN SAVES TIME,
FROUBLE, COSTS LITTLE
Drive your car until date of, départure.
PROTECTOR
Setisfaction Guaranteed er
Your Money Back
CHOOSE FROM 50 MORE— ALL 54—57’s
. We deliver. your car to Cavehs Point (P.0.E.)
. Your car processed and prepared for overseas shipment.
- Your car delivered te port by bonded drives.
. We, pay eff any belance on your car.
COMMUNITY BUICK | “3 fr".cti“s.tse
Community Buick
“ven
410 VALUE
SHIPPED PREPAID 3
‘ FOR ONLY
Send cash, check or money order to:
MARYLAND MFG. &ENG. CO.
4812 Lawrence Street
In Just 20 Minutes!
OF MOUNT HOLLY, N.J Route 38 at Madison Ave.
Y oe ea Mt. Holly, NJ
5 Minutes from Fort Dix Send me complete details abovt
and McGuire Air Force Base ([} Overseas shipment
Bladensburg, Maryland Route 38, Mt. Holly, NJ. ° en SERIE? Oe Sa
AMherst 7-2500 EST. 43 Yeon Addren ihn MOTORS
NEW and USED CARS
“We must have room for 1958 cars”
Eight “local car dealers have sac-
rificed profits, enabling us ‘to offer
you these beauties at LESS than
wholesale cost .. .
OFFICERS
NO CASH NEEDED
First Three Grades
es low as *295 down
‘57 Fords, Chev., Plym.
‘37 Mercs., Buicks, Olds.
‘97 Cadillacs, Lincolns
DISCOUNT MOTORS
Walk In... Take Your Choice. . .
Pick Up The Keys ... & Drive Out ad +, Ag 36 MONTHS TO
REpublic 7-7777
STCURITY @xmme
We finance you anywhere in the world regardless of duty station or place your own financing, if you choose
| emember...
“oy at Ross Discount
you write your own guarantee!
NAME YOUR OWN PAYMENTS
on approved credit
Call or write te Ross
Discount 7-8888
@ 100% GUARANTEE ON
MOST CARS!
@ BANK RATE FINANC
ING AVAILABLE
N.W., Washington, D.C
Open Daily 9-9,
Sun. 11-5
= $995
= $1695
= $3795
E6é EASTERN SECTION
OCTOBER 19, 1957
No Bones About
It, It’s Historical
SAN DIEGO, Calif. — Now a
historical landmark, the hundred-
year-old cemetery in San Diego’s
Old Town was once chosen as the
final resting place for anyone from
the mayor to the town’s worst
criminal.
San Diego’s first mayor, Don
Juan Maria Osuna, is buried there,
along with Don Jose Antonio De
Estudillo, the builder of what is
now Ramona’s marriage place. And
right in there with them is Yankee
Jim, hanged for horse stealing.
Actually Yankee Jim stole a boat
from San Diego Bay, but as there
was no law set for boat stealing,
he was convicted of horse stealing.
Many of the graveyard’s head-
stones have been carried away by
souvenier hunters, but all of the
epitaphs are recorded at the city’s
Serra Museum, such as the one
which explains, “Sacred to the
memory of John Stiles who came to
his death from a bullet from a re-
volver. It was one of the old fash-
ioned kind and brass mounted and
of such is the Kingdom of Heaven.”
East Coast Classified
INSURANCE
ANY CAR ANY RANK -ANY AGE Monthly
payments. NY State registered vehicles
Mitchel Field Ft Totten, Ft. Tolden Ft.
Hamilton Ft. Wadswort+ Floyd Bennett, Etc.
Cali tL 76990 oF write Insurance Service
39-22 108 st Corona, N Y
REAL ESTATE—APARTMENTS
FLORIDA—Retirement Homes and Homesites
Free Literature DeBary Heights Realty. Bor
773, DeBary, Florida
DESK PLATES
SEE OUR DISPLAY AD ON PAGE ES. MARY-
LAND MFG. & ENG. CO., 4812 LAWRENCE
STREET, BLADENSBURG, ‘MARYLAND
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES
Executives Tell “Who Gets Hired And Why.
Free Details. National Publications. Box 3731,
Washington 7, D.C
FURNITURE
WAREHOUSE SALES! ~ FURNITURE— BEDDING
— CARPETING Buy Factory Floor Samples.
Save 20% to 50% and more. Military Dis
counts on Nationally Advertised Merchandise.
For further information write or call MARLO
FURNITURE CO. 1323 14th St., N.W. Wash-
ington, D.C. DE 2-4747
ADVERTISEMENT
YOUNG MEN
(Ages 20 to 30)
Restaurant Manager
Career Opportunity
Earn $70-$80 per week
While you Train
Due to our tremendous ex-
pansion program, Hot
Shoppes — one of America’s
fastest growing restaurant
and hotel chains—has imme-
diate openings for young
men with ambition, charac-
ter and personality to train
to become restaurant mana-
gers. Food experience help-
ful but not necessary. $70-
$80 per week while you train.
Free meals. Paid vacations.
Relocation assistance. 5%%4-
day week. Group hospitaliza-
tion and many other em-
ployee benefits. For full in
formation on how you can
begin your career in the re
warding restaurant field,
write, giving approximate
discharge date, personal his-
tory, education and work ex-
perience to
Me. Foster Kunz,
Director Management
Development Program
HOT SHOPPES, INC.
3341 G@ St. N.W. Wash. 5, D.C.
.NEW and USED CARS NEW and USED CARS
-
1957 MERCURY............. $1395
% 1957 FORD ................ @ FINANCING CAN BE ARRANGED |
"e SOE CEE ns Sea teas TO THE INSTITUTION OF YOUR CHOICE
1956 CHEVROLET Hardtop @ GUARANTEED NATION-WIDE 100%
“ CO 5-6100 | 8=
e 1300 14th St. N. W., Washington, D.C.
kkk kkk kk K
BUY WITH ~*
MILITARY SALE —
OVER 20
YEARS .
AUTOMOBILE
yp yd MOTOR SALES, INC. 1957 CHEVROLETS
EVERY _ (Authorized Used Car Dealer) :
TRANSACTION Member of the Board of Trade
| $1195
Over 100 Cars To Choose From
@ NO FIXED DOWN PAYMENT
All Cars Subject to Prior Sale
BANK RATE | “aks cieckeo
from Bumper to
FINANCING AVAILABLE
90-DAY 4000-MILE GUARANTEE
CALL FOR IMMEDIATE CREDIT APPROVAL
ADams 2-0900
“THE ORIGINAL”
Auto Discount House
1510 Rhode Island Ave., N.E., Wash., D.C.
Bumper
We maintain
OVER 40 recon-
ditioning operations
New Car Warranty
(1 Block North of Thomas Circle)
Within Walking Distance of all Terminals and Mid-city Hotels
a . - EEE
REEDMAN MOTORS > DE SOTOS DE SOTOS
ROUTE No. 1, LANGHORNE, PA. PRODUCT OF CHRYSLER MOTOR CAR CORPORATION
SALES : SERVICE
SK 7-4961 SK 7-4965 1957 LEFTOVER MODELS
IMPORTANT
SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT
As of September 18, 1957 we received from Chev-
rolet factories Division of General Motors our last ship-
ment of BRAND NEW 1957 Chevrolet Passenger Cars,
Station Wagons, Trucks, etc.
Due to the great demand for LEFTOVER MODELS,
Mr. Reedman went all out this year with one of the
WORLD’S LARGEST INVENTORIES of BRAND NEW
1957 CHEVROLETS.
BRAND NEW — — — FACTORY FRESH
$500,000 INVENTORY
WE ARE RATED BY DESOTO MOTOR DIVISION
.AS SECOND IN SALES NATIONALLY
WE ARE OUT TO TAKE FIRST PLACE BY
ANNOUNCEMENT DATE OF THE ‘58 MODELS
PRICES AS LOW AS $2399. AS LOW AS $199: DOWN.
We will overallow up to $1500 on your used car. For
Example:— If your used car is worth $1000 in cash, we
will allow you up to $2500. If you have no car to trade,
This is an opportunity of a lifetime! Get yours we have a special deal for you.
— Ned last! We are sweeping the floor for the 1958
odels!
We have a few Executive Cars, driven by De Soto Factory
Representatives, and a few of our own company Executive
If you still owe payments on your present automobile,
we will pay off the balance and work out a deal on a
BRAND NEW 1957 CHEVROLET LEFTOVER MODEL.
Cars.
USED CARS
CHRYSLER IMPERIAL
DODGE PLYMOUTH
REEDMAN CORP.
CHRYSLER CORPORATION AUTHORIZED
DIRECT FACTORY DESOTO DEALER
LANGHORNE, PENNA.
Open 6 Days Till 11 P.M.
In many instances your payments may be lower, de-
pending on what Model you select.
G.M.A.C. Finance Plan is available.
DE SOTO
Our large volume of business allows us to TOP ALL
COMPETITION!
Buy direct from the Salesroom Floor and SAVE!!!
OPEN 6 DAYS A WEEK UNTIL 11:00 P.M,
CLOSED SUNDAYS
ROUTE #1
—.
rts
A ¢ + » .
‘Bee roy te apts.
< "es Beas i. ge
ri te z
} ari Z - oe
je 4 : , a7 wt Ap +
NEW and USED CARS ~ NEW and USED CARS NEW and USED CARS NEW and USED CARS NEW and USED CARS
: “55 BUICK Special “41D” 4-Door — V-8
EEDMAN MOTORS Lede nn. $UZOO
. . ‘55 wend Gaitene Victoria Hardtop—V-8
ngine, Fordomatic, Full
Leather Interior. Loaded. $1 199
~
‘ "55 CHEVROLET Bel Air Hardtop Coupe.
a “gull Powerglide. $1 199
ON ROUTE 1, AT LANGHORNE eelieviiny Ph. sitios 7-4961 | chemois Bsaeg tae
: ' OPEN 6 DAYS A WEEK ‘TIL 11 P. M. — CLOSED SUNDAYS Leoded. ... }
q “55 PLYMOUTH Belvedere Hardtop Coupe
. V-8 Engine, Powerflite
5 : Transmission. Loaded. $1099
PRIVATE SALE NOW GOING ON © Ean, Fordonatie SOQ
ngine, Fordomotic $999
_ _ aes ,
Many Models (1957) Left Over from ber’s Inventory. Some Models as Much as | | ‘55 CHEVROLET Bel Air 2 & 4-Door —
6-Cyl. Engine, Standard
esecesnes rene $2300 Under Original Cost. $500,000 Inventory from 1947 to 1957 Models. 1956 and Transmission. Loaded $999
1955 Models as Low as $99 Down, Payments Low as $27 Per Month. No Down Payment | | ‘55 NASH Rambler Country Club Coupe,
on Cars Up to $600. Open 6 Doys a Week—9 A.M. ‘til 11 P.M. —k—«£a $899
Economy Car
‘57 BUICK Special “43” Riviere Hardtop | ‘56 DE SOTO Firedome Sportsman Hard- | ‘56 FORD Fairlane Tudor Sedan — V-8 | °° CHEVROLET “210% 2-Door Sedan —
4-Voor—V-8 Engine ¥, Cus- top Coupe — V-8 Engine, Powerflite Engine, Fordomatic, =, Engine, Powerglide. $999
‘tom interior. Load. 99 Transmission, Power Steering and Power Steering. Loaded. $1499 OD sesenssseessereren
ear, Save almest $1400 p boyy Passed, S19 un- | /56 PLYMOUTH Savoy 4- ond 2-Door — ‘55 pd Cutentine 2-Door Sedan —
‘57 DE SOTO Firedome 4-Door Sedan— 1999 6-Cyl. Engine -8 Engine, Stand. Trans- $899
v4 Standard Transmission model .,, eBid seccthse Powerflite; Leeded. .... 1299 mission, Radio, Heater .
me Torsion-Air Ride. Loaded. Used car. | ’56 oer Species “46C" Convertible | s¢ CHEVROLET 210" 4- $12 g. | ‘55 CHEVROLET 210" 2 & 4-Door —
Save almost $2399 Coupe—V-8 Engine, Dynaflow, Power Cyl. Engine, Powerglide. Standord T ion. $899
$1300 ...... devtiondteceesesiie wo Steering Gnd Brakes, $1 899 tana... $1 399 Loaded .
. | ‘57 MERCURY Montclair 2-Door Sedan — Leather Inter. Loaded. ‘56 PLYMOUTH Ploza 2. and 4-Door—6- | ‘99 CHEVROLET “150” 2-Door Sedan —
¥-8 Turnpike Engine, Automatic | ‘56 OLDSMOBILE “88” Holiday 4-Door Cyl. Engine, Standard Standard Transmission. $799
eee a Transmission, Turnpike — Headlites, Hardtop-—Rocket Engine, | Hydramatic Transminion, Loodee, .. PUIDO Loaded .
@lmest $1200 een $2399 | [oxice. $1899 | CHEVROLET "210" 2-Dr. & 4-Dr.— | > OCU En set Standard” @apeney
‘S7 PACKARD Clipper Sedon 4-Door — | 'S6 BUICK Special "43" Riviera Hardtop Lesdes, dimen S000 Toenictea. Leehed. S799
v-8 ine, -0-Matic Transmis- 4-Door. V-8 Engine, Dynoflow, Cus- Gander abet 3? model $1 199 ‘54 OLDSMOBILE “98” Hotiday Coupe
sion, Power Steering and Brakes, tom Interior. Loaded. Almost $2000 | . ; . Rocket Engine, Hydramatic, Power
Loaded. Save 23 Under cost 56 FORD Customline 2-Door Sedan — Steering & oy oe ‘
‘on eesadt ses Gimest $2000 ............ 99 a... oa 6-Cyl. Engine, Overdrive $1199 Weeden & fant tea 1499
tib “ ‘ST FORD Fairlane “500” Victoria Hard- | ‘56 BUICK Special “45R” Riviera Coupe. | , sated. ;..... fe aac ‘54 BUICK Super “56C” Convertible
top Coupe — Also Victoria Hardtop V-8 Engine, Dynafiow, Custom In- 55 OLDSMOBILE “98” Holiday 4 - Door Coupe—V-8 Engine, Dynafiow, Power
Fordor and Convertible. V-8 Thun- terior. Loaded. Almost $2000 Hardtop—Rocket Engine, Hydramatic, Steering and Brakes .
derbird Engine, Fordomatic, Padded Under cost 99 Power Steering and Brakes, Electric heather Uphols Loaded $1299
Save almost $1800 Desh. Loaded.. Without Power Steer- ‘57 model $17 Windows and Seat. $1799 ‘ 6 ee.
"57 MERCURY Montclair Hardtop 4-Door. lng—-$100 ‘tess. Seve $229E |’ MERCURY Monterey Hardtop Coupe— Loaded. sa gg Me ge pw
| V4 almost $1000 ....... V-8 Engine, Mercomatic, Leather ‘55 MERCURY Montclair Hardtop Coupe. . ngine, andar $1099
eng. rane femreamets. Ley Thapar ‘57 BUICK Special 2- oo 4-Doors—V-8 Upholstery. $1799 V-8 Engine, Mercomatic, Power Transmission. Loaded
| Seat, Leother interior Engine, Dynaflow. Loaded. Used Loaded. Steering and Brakes. 54 CHEVROLET Bel Air Hardtop Coupe;
Save almost $1700 .. $2799 car. Save almost 99 ‘56 PONTIAC “860 Catalina Hardtop Loaded $1599 Also Convertible. Power $899
457 BUICK Super '56-R” Riviere Coupe— $1100 ; $22 Coupe — V-8 Engine, Hydramatic ‘55 PACKARD Clipper Panama Hardtop glide. Loaded
V-8 Engine, Dynaflow, Power Steer- | ‘57 PLYMOUTH Belvedere Hordtop Coupe Loaded. Almost $2000 $1699 Coupe—V-8 Engine, Ultramatic, Power | ‘54 NASH Statesman Custom 4-Door Se
ing and Brakes. Loaded. Used car. V-8 Engine, Torqueflite Transmission. “a ue = Phe a ‘ Ae — $1599 dan — 6-Cyl. Engine, Overdrive
Sa Imost Loaded. Save almost : airlane Sunliner Convertible Loaded Loaded.
styes ve Sinaia $2799 $950 . $2399 Bospe. V-8 Engine, Standord ‘55 CHRYSLER Windsor Nassau Hardtop Economy car $899
57 DE SOTO Fircflite 4 r 'S7 PLYMOUTH Belvedere _ Convertible ransmission. Coupe—V-8 Engine, Powerflite Trans- ‘ >
ig a. a | ‘ome, 4 Door Seden-—295 Coupe—V-8, Powerflite Transmission. Loaded. $1 599 mission, Power Steering $1499 ” nena a _ ae
mission, Power Steering, Torsion-Air ie. Save almost 2299 "56 CHEVROLET Bel Air Hardtop 4-Door and Brakes. Loaded. Trensmission. Leoded $899
Ride. Venda. Neat ear. $11 & 2-Door — 6-Cyl. Engine, Standard 55 BUICK Century “66R” Riviera Hard-
Save almost $1400 .. $2799 ‘57 CHEVROLET Bel Air Hardtop Coupe— Transmission. Loaded. Almost $1300 top Coupe—V-8 Engine, Dynaflow, | ‘54 PLYMOUTH Beivedere Hardtop Coupe
‘57 PONTIAC Starchief Catalina Hardtop V-8 Engine, Powerglide. Used car. — = $1499 a ocd , Custom _ Interior = Transmission $799
cage as Imost ‘ mode oade oice ©
Sg Pa Ag em. yg emo — ONL. ST $2299 ‘56 FORD Fairlane Sunliner Convertible colors $1499 ‘54 MERCURY Monterey 4-Door Sedan
Upholstery. Loaded. Used ‘ ‘57 DODGE Coronet 4-Door Sedan — Coupe — V->8 Engine, Fordomatic, ‘55 PONTIAC Starchief Custom Catalina V-8 Engine, Overdrive. 99
car. Save almost $1700 $2699 Powerflite Transmission. $1999 aoe Upholstery. $1 599 cetee . oa ane. Hydramatic Loaded $7
‘57 DE SOTO Firedo t Hard- Load. Save almost $1300 Loade ower Steering rakes, ‘54 CHEVROLET “210” 4 & 2 With
top Coupe V-8 Engine "Tocquefite, ‘s7 CHEVROLET "210" 2-Door Sedan — | ‘56 PLYMOUTH Belvedere Hardtop Coupe. Leather Uphols. Loaded. $1 399 , or te Powerglide. ——
Power Steering and Brakes, Torsion- 6-Cyl. Engine, Powerglide. Loaded. 6-Cyl. Engine, Powerflite $1399 ‘SS DODGE Custom Royal 4-Door Sedan. Loaded $699
Air Ride. Loaded. Used $2599 Used car. Save $1 899 transmission. Loaded. V-8 Efi,ine, Powerflite Transmission, ‘54 NASH Rambler Super 4-Door—Stand
‘57 OLDSMOB le "4a" Holiday Coupe— | ‘57 PLYMOUTH | Plaxo 2-Door Sedan. 6- F Sie Lian teeters 6 Comermaee Leaded — $1 399 ard Transmission $699
Rocket Engine, Hydramatic, Padded Cyl. Engine, St d V-8 Engine, Powerolide. Loaded. Al ‘55 MERCURY Montclair Convertible Loaded
at tine aaa $2599 Castom Vein. Leaded. $1699 most $1500 under $1 599 Coupe—V-8 Engine, Mercomatic, Po ‘54 FORD Custom Ranch Wagon 2-Door
; car. Save almost $1400 Save almost $800 ....: cost ‘57 model wer Steering and V-8 Engine, Fordomatic
‘S7 BUICK Special “45R” Riviera Coupe— ‘$7 STUDEBAKER Silver Hawk 2 - Door ‘56 FORD Fairlane Victoria Hardtop Brakes. Loaded. $1 399 Loaded , $699
V-8 Engine, Dynafléw, Power Steer- Sedan. 6-Cyl. Engine, Coupe — V-8 Thunderh'rd Enaine, ‘55 MERCURY Monterey Hard:op Coupe— ‘53 OLDSMOBILE Super 88 Holiday
ing and Brakes. U. S, Royel Master Overhead. Loaded _.... 1599 Fordomatic, Padded $1 599 V-8 Engine, Mercomatic, $1399 Coupe — Rocket Engine, Hydramatic,
Tires, Custom interior. “ Loaded. ‘S7 FORD Customline “300” Fordor — Dash, Power Steering Leather Uphols. Loaded Power Steering & :
Used car. Save $2599 V-8 Engine, Standard $1599 56 PLYMOUTH Belvedere 4-Mr. Hardtop ‘55 DE SOTO Firedome Sportsman Hard Brakes. Loaded $799
almost $1700 . } Transmission. Loaded. V-8 Engine, Powerflite $1 599 top Coupe—V-8 Engine, $1 499 ‘53 OLDSMOBILE Suge: 88 Holiday
“5? DODGE Custom Royal Lancer Hardtop | ‘57 CHEVROLET “150” 4-Door Sedon — | __ Power Steering. Loaded. — ee LOwerflite. Loaded Coupe—Rocket Engine, Hy
4 Sac — vn coins, Torquefiite 6-Cyl. — Standard Transmission. 56 7 sot apatae wae ot 2 Maso a 55 gy + gee Door — V- . En- iain 6 6 1 : $699
ransmission, ower + ind ded. U 3 - '‘-— - neine, oweralice. gine, utomatic ransmission, ower ’
Brakes. Loaded. ah eo $300 "7 1599 Loaded. Almost $1239 $1499 Brakes $1399 "53 BUICK Special "45R” Riviera Coupe—
Save almost $1500 . $2599 'S6 LINCOLN Premier Hardtop Coupe— under cost ‘57 model Loaded. 8-Cyl. Engine, Dyna $699
“57 CHEVROLET Bel Air ‘Hardtop 4-Door— V-8 Engine, Automatic Transmission, "56 MERCURY Custom 2-Dr. rnd 4-Dr.— ‘5S OLDSMOBILE Super “88 4-Door — flow. Loaded
V-8, Powerglide, Power Steering, Air- Power Steering and Brakes,- Electric V-8 Engine, Mereo- 1499 Rocket Engine, Hydra- $1399 ‘53 CHRYSLER New Yorker 4-Door Se
Cond. Loaded. Used Windows and Seat. Loaded. Al- matic Loaded. matic. Loaded. dan—V-8 Engine, Power Steering,
car. Save almost $1200 $2499 most $3300 under 2799 '56 CHEVROLET “210” Hard*en Coune— ‘55 CHEVROLET Bel Air Hardtop Coupe— Automatic Transmission $699
‘57 DE SOTO Firesweep 4-Door Sedan — cost ‘57 model ................ es Engine, Standard $1499 V-8 Engine, Powerglide. $1299 Loaded
v-8 Engine, -Powerflite Transmission, "57 CHEVROLET “210” Bs ~~ Sedan — Transmission. Loaded Loaded. ‘53 PONTIAC Chieftain Deluxe Conver
Torsion-Air | Ride. Loaded. Used 6-Cyl. Engine, St d "56 STUDEBAKER Commender ?-Dr. Sedan ‘55 ty y hee Ba Catalina Coupe — tible Coupe — 8-Cyl. Engine, Hydra
car. Save almost Heoter,. etc. Used 99 V-8 Engine, Automatic 99 - ngine, Hydramatic. 1299 matic, Leather upholstery. 9
$1000 ....... $2499 car. Save $800 . $16 Transmission. Loaded $1 3 Loaded. Loaded $5 9
OPEN DAILY TIL 11 P.M. OPEN DAILY ‘TIL 11 P. M. OPEN DAILY ‘TIL 11 P. M. OPEN DAILY ‘TIL 11 P M. OPEN DAILY ‘TIL 11 P. M.
| :
| | ‘53 CHEVROLET Bel Air 4-Door & 2-Door,
1 C > le i
NO MONEY DOWN | WILL PAY SPOT CASH FOR YOUR CAR | Fiesta WE ee
'§3 DODGE Coronet 4-Door Sedan—-V-8 | OR IF YOU STILL OWE PAYMENTS ON YOUR PRESEN? AUTOMOBILE (REGARDLESS OF YEAR, MAKE OR | Leases
Renies, Standard Trene- MODEL) SUCH AS: CADILLAC, OLDSMOBILE, BUICK, PONTIAC, CHEVROLET, CHRYSLER, DE SOTO, DODGE, | ‘53 PONTIAC Chieftain Deluxe 2-Door—
mission, Redic, Hester .. S499 | PLYMOUTH, LINCOLN, cMERCURY, FORD, NASH, HUDSON, STUDEBAKER, PACKARD. ALSO FOREIGN CARS, a-Cyl. Engine, Hydremetic. GEE 8
; . Rise TRUCKS AND MOTORCYCLES, WE WILL PAY OFF THE BALANCE AND WORK OUT A DEAL ON ANOTHER Loaded
"53 CHRYSLER Windsor Deluxe Newport AUTOMOBILE. IN M INSTANCES YOUR PAYMENTS MAY BE LOWER _ mM 56 FORD Count Sed 4-Dr. 9-Pass.
Coupe. 6-Cyl. Engine Auto- 99 OR MODEL, WE HAVE FOR SALE ALL MAKES OF USED CARS FROM’ $39 TO $6499. CHECK OUR LIST Station Wogon — V-8 Thunderbird En.
matic Transmission,etc. .... $3 AND PRICES IN THIS AD. ine, Fordomatic. Loaded. Almost
‘53 PLYMOUTH Cambridge 2-Door Sedan. ii a eee
Standard Transmission, s d Clo a] Law Recentl Passed model.
Heater, @86. scscsnsesserseesere $299 un ay Si G bas y | ‘56 CHEVROLET “210% 2- and 4-Door
: Station Wagons—6-Cyl. Engine, Stand-
“53 CHEVROLET “210” 2- and 4-Doors— d Transmission, Radio, Heat Al
With or without Power- Open 6 Days a Week—9 A. M. to 11 P. M. ard Transmission, Radio, Heater. Al
glide, Heater, ete. ......... " $499 ‘57 model. $1499
"53 WILLYS Aero Lark “2-Door Sedan — seiiabamt Gk pte de > = 6-Cyl. Engine, Standard
6-Cyl. Engine, Standard "51 PACKARD Cli 4-Door— H ‘55 CHEVROL el Air Convertible Cpe. ransmission.
| Srenneiniees Loaded. 2 $299 Uitrematic a :. adhe to ite $79 Ratign. Wapens Also Hardtop Coupe—é6-Cyl. Engine, Loaded $1299
| ‘52 CHEVROLET $ ‘ D “ 2 4 f Trucks, Sport Cars Standard Transmission. $1299 "56 FORD F-100 '-ton pickup—6-Cyl.
| 4-Doors—With oe, witout 390 ‘50 CHEVROLET Styleline Deluxe 2- and F re { weyung hears = — one oo $1099
| i Motorcycles | ‘56 NASH Rambler Customs Cross Country ransmission, Loade
Powerglide, Loaded. . $ 4-Door. With or without — Station Wagon—6-Cyl. E Stand- | ’56 CHEVROLET “3100” 14-Ton Pickup—
“62 HUDSON Hornet 4-Dr. s to Powergiide, Levded. .... ~ $1 49 on Teeneniasion ' Dower Geckos V-8 Engine, Standard Transmission.
“A A » Sedan, " $99 ‘57 NASH Rambler Cross Country Sta- Leather Upholstery Luggage Rack, Loaded. Used as pleasure
Ms te . ie ‘a me m iy ‘50 STUDEBAKER Champion 2-Door Sedan elie 0 y Sains, Auto. Trans., Motel. bedy fecks ‘similar to weed. re car. mene na $1099
ustom 4-Door Sedan —. Y- Overdrive, Radio, c ed, Almost $1500 under ; f ountry Sedan -Passenger
Engine, Fondemetic, $249 as ‘oy Rh ara $1 29 Save almost $1100 $21 o9 pied 89 adel. nom $1 699 Station Wagon—V-8 En- $1 499
Rodio end Heater ......... . "ST CHEVROLET 14-Ton Pickup—Standard | ‘6 CHEVROLET “210” 2-Door & 4-Door | 155 ONTIAC "ETO" “Statice” Wengen —
2 “ter . . aA J ‘ i
51 $e shar A ame DeLuxe 4-Door 49 coutias Sitverstreak Sedanette Transmission. Loaded. Used Truck aa uvetta Almas ttaeb alias Hydramatic, Leather
Seda . " P stery.
Radio ond Heater oo... $199 ERTS Y LE ‘ $99 frond ae $1 299 cost ‘57 $1 699 ov eal $1 399
q , - Weal din: sea rtd "55 PLYMOUTH Pi 2-Door Station
ad Stendord Tronminion, = Coupe — | “48 HUDSON Commodore “6 4 - Door 7 sate b xieeed : wapwenthee: T PLYMOUTH Custom Suburban — V-8 Gia — 6G Geninn, Siendaee
’ 99 tandar: ransmission ngine, tondar rans- ngine, Powerflite Trans- Transmission.
Radio and Heater .. $1 ENR SS: er ae $69 mission. Loaded. $1499 mission. Loaded. ..... $1 599 Loaded. ....... $1099
"31 Revie bok “98” Convertible Coupe nsdidioun ai ‘SY ZUNDAPP Motorcycle—4-Speed Shift | ‘6 CHEVROLET “150” "2-Door Station | “55 FORD Coston, Ranch Wagon 2-Door—
Rock ne, 99 Special luxe Transmission, Buddy Sect, Wagon—6-Cyl. ee ngine, Standar
Hydramatic, ote. peenidaaten > $ CHD COUPO ooncccererccvercrcerenree $49 Windshield. ‘Loaded. : ' $399 Powerglide. Loaded. .. $1 599 Transmission. Loaded. $1099
=
ee eg ty Sin ah igen tS a aD CR eg pars “Hy
NEW and USED CARS NEW and USED CARS NEW and USED CARS — NEW and USED CARS” . the
Studebaker
Features
Wider Look
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — A wider
look—combined with a lower and
flared silhouette—highlight the
styling features of the new 1958
BE SAFE! BE WISE! =
see one of the world’s
LARGEST
FRANCHISED
Studebaker sedans and station Bx sete s fe ie.
wagons introduced to the public NO Dow DOWN PAYMEN Ford-Lincoln-Mercury
October, 28 Jn, dealer showrcoms| MMMM SALES & SERVICE Fp OR ALL WagelsT,? oRabes Dealers for the
The new Packard Hawk also SOD LETE SE eRViCE F LL MAKES & 0D > :
made its debut at this time—join- DY, FENDER 4 PAS TIES, PARTS, 4 ELS
ing Studebaker-Packard’s Golden NT—0y CCESSORiEs,
Verseas Delivery Arranged
Hawk and Silver Hawk for 1958,
which with 14inch wheels com-
prise one of the lowest series of
cars on the road.
In November, two sleek com-| @ hag.
pletely new models will be intro-| @ 7
duced into the Studebaker line: a
two-door hardtop in both the: Presi- RENAULT MORGAN
dent and Commander series, As Low As As Low As
Incorporating the outstanding +919 5
features of the award-winning 41375
Hawks’ sleek, low profile and fin fastest sport car made
Hawks, the President, Commander 4CV and Dauphine On Display at the price
and Champion series combine the TOE: 4
treatment with big car massiveness.
Chief characteristics of these
new Studebakers are dual head-
lamps, lowered roof line and high,
canted rear fins.
The new Packard Hawk blends
the lines of Studebaker-Packard’s
successful Hawk styling with a new
European concept, in keeping with
Packard’s classic styling.
Dealers also will display the 1958
version of the popular Scotsman
models which scored success a8 a
1957 model
The lowered roof line is a com-
bined styling and engineering
achievement, accomplished with no
loss of head room. It was made
possible through the introduction
this year of a one-piece drive shaft
which enables the floor pan to be
lowered, The door lines remain the
same
“he one-piece drive shaft in-
creases the efficiency of transmit-
ting power to the rear wheels and
results in a larger and more rugged
unit. The 14-inch wheels being of-
fered as standard equipment on all
asa
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‘far enough.
ALL wrapped
up in her work
is one Martha
Hyer who has
a big scene in
this towel in a
new movie ver-
sion of “My
Man God-
frey.” Martha
hopes that the
towel will do
for her: what
the sarong did
for Dorothy
Lamour. David
Niven and
June Allyson
also appear in
the movie.
The attractive
Miss Hyer
hails from
Fort Worth,
Good Old Hollywood
OLLYWOOD chit-chat columnists will always be with
us, probably. However, if they MUST write about books
and other things they know nothing of, why don’t they ask
friendly literate souls to straighten them out before they send their
deathless syndicated prose across America and to all the ships at se a?
As only one example from many recent ones, Sheilah Graham, in
her column dated Oct. 9, had this to say:
“That wonderful Mexican comedian, Cantinflas, returns to Holly-
wood in ‘three weeks, with the good news that he will make a picture
here — probably for Columbia. Cantinflas has kept his mobile mouth
closed on the cause of his feud with Mike Todd. It’s a pity, because he
is the man who should play Sancho Panza, the eccentric who tilted the
windmills in “Don Quixote,” which will be Todd’s next tilm.
a Sancho is an eccentric who tilted windmills, the world is truly
mad.
+ o .
A PUBLICITY BLURB claims that Martha Hyer says other glamor
dolls of the movies can squirm with joy over a chance to play a bathtub
scene; she'll take “after-bath emoting.”
In universal-International’s “My Man Godirey,” the blonde does
an eight-minute scene with David Niven while clad only in a bath
towel. And, says Martha, “there are big advantages to the towel over
the tub. In the dunking scenes a gal is up to her ears in soap bubbles.
In a towel scene she covers what she can and takes advantage of what
she can’t. A tub hides the figure, a towel accentuates it. Believe me,
the suds finish a sad second as far as I’m concerned.”
~ BRIDC iE
Sheinwold
PNAS HATH
When your contract depends on
one suit, consider all the possible
breaks in the suit before you
choose your play.
South won the opening lead with
the king of spades and led a low
diamond. West slyly played the
nine, and declarer finessed dum-
my’s jack.
This was a step in the right di-
rection. If the finesse lost, the
defenders would surely play two
diamonds on the trick. Dummy’s
ace and king of diamonds would
then be able to clear the suit.
The step did not, however, go
East discarded a
heart, and the bad news was out.
Dummy could win three diamond
tricks, but the rest of the suit
was dead.
South struggled on, but the hand
was hopeless. He finally managed
New Gadgets
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the under edge of the telephone
so that it is always handy. The
mechanical pencil is fastened on
an 18%-inch long chain and is de-
signed to frustrate children who
might want to wander with the
pencil, Easily installed or re-
moved, the clip can be placed on
the left or right side. (The Gard-
ners, 691 Vernon Ave., Glencoe,
Til.)
® Table Set modeled in the
shape of a flower pot with flowers
holds sugar, salt and pepper. The
white pot holds the sugar, the red
rose serves aS.a pepper shaker
and the yellow rose as a salt shaker.
The plastic set stands seven and
one-half inches high. (Rothman’s,
207 E. 91st St., Brooklyn; N.Y.)
® Laminating Kit for perman-
ently sealing clippings or pictures
between clear plastic requires no
water connections or installation.
The kit includes a four-by-five-inch
electric sealing press with a 300
watt 115 volt heater, two polish
plates and 50 sheets of plastic. Re-
fills of plates and sheets are avail-
able.. (Therm Appliance Mfg. Co.,
Inc., 612 S. First St., St. Charles,
Til.)
© Driveway Reflector “lights
up” from all directions. Designed
for parking lots, home driveways,
boat docks and other applications,
the reflector is made of a hollow
three-inch “beehive” molded from
transparent. acrylic plastic. Refliec-
tor Div., Dynamie Specialties Corp.,
PO Box 184, Birmingham, Mich.
Ue Od
to go down two tricks, much to
his disgust.
Having considered the possibil-
ity of a 3-1 break in diamonds,
South should have gone further.
He should have provided against
a 40 break.
- . -
THE CORRECT play is to duck
the first diamond altogether, al-
lowing West to win with the nine.
When East is obliged to discard,
the rest is easy. South can regain
the lead and finesse the jack of
diamonds... Dummy _ provides. six
diamond tricks, and South wins at
least 10 tricks altogether.
Nothing important can be lost
by this first play in diamonds. — if
South dealer
Tex. |
North-South vulnerable |
|
|
|
|
NORTH
a73
¥s2
@AKI7653
~ & 53
WEST KAST
231096 @#Q854
y KJ ¥vQ108653
#421098 @ None
&K92 &I1084
SOUTH
& AK2
wy AQXT4
@42
: & AQT 6
South West North East |
1 NT Pass 3 NT Pass
Pass Pass
Opening lead—@ J
East happens to follow suit, dum- |
my’s ace and king will later drop
the remaining diamonds. South |
gives up his chance to win all
seven of dummy’s diamonds, but
he does not need all seven tricks
to assure | his contract.
a FINANCING OR INSURING YOUR AUTOMOBILE
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PAK-CAP is a Bancroft
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:1's CRUSH PROOF, |
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* BLUE CAP
3-304-o
BANCROFT CAP CO. © FRAMINGHAM, MASS.
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INTERNATIONAL SERVICE INSURANCE CO.
GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES FINANCE CO.
1407 West Lancester Fort Worth, Texes
| DESIRE TO FINANCE () REFINANCE [] INSURE []) AUTOMOBILE
DESCRIBED BELOW
Cor Yeor Moke. Model Body Type___
No. Cyls.__ __Date Purch. __New or Used Cost
Current Yeor &
State Registration___ Your Age_____Marita! Stotus___ —"
Age of Youngest Driver in Household is— ond is Mole [) Femcle
is Aute Driven to Work?- No. of Miles 1 Woy—
s Cor Used for Business Purposes Other Thon to & From Work? Yes [15
Nome ond Rank an
Militory Address.
Send rotes and information on OVERSEAS INSURANCE in in Beene. a
No
Se SKK Kee OO eS
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION FOR FINANCE CUSTOMERS
Selling Price
Amount to Be Finonced
»
News @ Reviews
USINESS
26 ARMY TIMES
OCTOBER 19, 1957
‘Breakthroughs’
Jack Up Economy
LOS ANGELES—Technological “breakthroughs” spark
the growth of the economy, provide additional employment
opportunities and raise the standard of living. In addition,
their application generates growth
of individual companies.
That’s what H. Leslie Hoffman,
president of Hoffman Electronics
Corp., told listeners at the dedica-
tion ceremony here marking the
opening of the company’s new Re-
search and Development Center.
Hoffman outlined some of the
areas in which these breakthroughs
may occur within the next 10 years,
and cited the problems of the mili-
tary industry and commerce as pro-
viding challenges for the engineers
of today.
“We are going through a revolu-
tion in our military concepts which
reflects immediately into a revolu-
tion of weapons,” Hoffman said.
The H-Bomb and the missile have
Mutual Funds
Bid Ask
Biue Ridge Mutual 10.09 10.97
Boston Fund 15.97
Canada Gen Fd 2 12.11
Century Shares 4 22.85
Comwith Stk Fd 25 11.25
Delaware vhs 36 10.30
Del Income Fd .. 94 8.73
Dreyfus Fd 2% 8.95
Faton & How Stk 18.52 19.80
Fidelity Fd . 12.22 13.21
Founders Bow» k d- 6.97 7.58
Group Se Com Stk 10.34 11.33
Group Sec Petrol 10,24 11.22
Groene Gee Gteel ...ccceoces 7.08 7.76
Growth Indust Shares 13.16 13.55
Hamilton Fd HC-7 3.90 4.26
Inatit Growth Fd 9.15 10.01
Johnston Mut Fd 19.24 19.24
Keystone Cust Fd B-l .... 23.72 24.76
Keystone Cust Fd B-2 ee 22.28 24.30
Keystone Cust Fd B-3 e 15.86 17.30
Keystone Cust Fd B-4 , 9.23 10.08
Keystone Cust Fd K-1 7.87 8.59
Keystone Cust Fd K-2 10.45 11.40
Keystone Cust Fd S-1 15.44 14.66
Keystone Cust Fd S-2 10.16 11.09
Keystone Cust Fd 8-3 10.40 11.35
Keystone Fund Can 9.90 10.71
Lexington Tr Fd 10.28 11.24
Mass Investors 10.02 10.83
Mass Life Fd .......-cccces 17.46 18.88
Natl Investors 9.04 9.77
Pine St Fd nas eames cueue 19.05 19.24
Price TR Growth ...cccces 28.53 28.72
Sterling Invest Fd ......... 10.14 10.73
Texas Fund vem 7.37 8.05
Unit Cont Fd soceceece 6.65 7.27
Value Line Fd 5.18 5.61
10.86 11.74
Whitehall Fd
Have you considered
investing in Bank
and Insurance Stocks?
required a complete re-evaluation
of our past concepts and they in
turn will require a complete new
family of support equipment from
the electronics industry.”
Commenting on recent electronic
achievements, Hoffman noted that
television, computers, transistors,
new communications techniques,
and missiles are all developments
which saw their inception, growth,
and acceptance in the past 10 years.
He added that at Hoffman, as in
the electronics industiy as a whole,
75 percent of the employees are
working on products and services
that had not been developed 10
years ago.
+ * *
WILLIAM H. STARBUCK has
been appointed sales manager
of Elgin National Watch Com-
pany’s Micronics division, which
is engaged in both military and
commercial contract manufac-
turing of high precision, sub-
miniature devices and assem-
blies, chiefly in the missile and
aircraft fields.
LOOKING TOWARD the future, |
Hoffman named some of the prob-
lems which the electronics industry
will be called upon to solve: faster
communications, better utilization
of the airwaves, jam-proof naviga-
tion systems, long-distance radar,
standardization of computers, and
traffic control both in the air and
on the ground.
He also pointed to solar energy
aS opening up new horizons for
power sources in remote areas.
Commenting on the significance
of the new engineering facililty,
James D. McLean, president of
Hoffman Laboratories, a wholly
owned subsidiary of Hoffman Elec-
|
!
}
tronics, said that recently an-
nounced plans of the U. S. military
forces point toward increased |
spending in the field of electronic
equipment.
“This new engineering center
will help to gear Hoffman Labora-
tories to these increased require-
ments of the military,” he stated.
|
New Official
COLUMBUS, Ohio.—Wilbert H.
“Will” Yahn has been appointed
Assistant General Manager of the
Columbus Division of North Amer-
ican Aviation.
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DEFENSE TRENDS
>
Missile Cooperation Urged
Tex.—The British War Office's Director of Weapons Development says
Pn ge
exorbitant cost of missile programs.
development
gor geen
—*. and equipment for the
TELE
ne
i te
i
search and Development Labora-
tories at Fort Belvoir and
adopted by the Army and Marine
Commonly referred to as the
M4T6, the bridge utilizes light-
weight components that can be
;
heaviest single component.
The pneumatic half-floats join
together to form a complete unit
for use as a support at 15-foot
intervals. Deflated floats are stored
and transported in canvas carrying
bags.
Hollow aluminum alloy deck sec-
tions, less than 16 feet long weigh-
ing. 225 pounds each, are placed
side by side in a staggered posi-
tion to serve as a road surface.
Steel beams and plywood panels
aré used to provide stiffness and
distribute -the load to the floats.
The bridge can be manually
erected at rates up to 1% feet per
minute. Construction can be
speeded by the use of newly-
developed bridge erection aids,
such as a tilting bed trailer that
earries and launches a complete
bay with ease.
Small Rectifier
SYRACUSE, N. Y. — General
Electric has announced the devel-
opment of a new series of 20-
ampere stud-mounted 200°C. silicon
rectifiers which are believed to be
the smallest rectifiers on the
market for their current rating.
It is expected that the new small
silicon rectifiers will be used in
computer, airborne electronic
equipment, and two-way ~ radio
power supplies as well as in other
power supplies where ‘size, weight
and high temperature operation are
nece
The new silicon devices have a
peak one-cycle surge current rat-
ing of 300-amperes with operating
eurrents up to 20-amperes. Maxi-
mum leakage current rating on
SAVE sy MAIL
CURRENT
ANNUAL RATE
INSURED SAFETY
Mailin your surplus
funds, We pay all post.
age. Savings in by 10th
eorn from 1st. Accounts
insured to $10,000 by
agency of U. &, Govt,
TRANS-BAY
PEDERAL SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOC,
1738 Post $t. © San Frencisce
WRITE FOR OUR BROCHURE
—— = —-= : —— —
exchange of information between friendly nations if we are to cut
Maj. Gen. George Edward R. Bastin, co-ordinator
2 Get PX Jobs
NEW YORK. — Two new ap-
pointments in the headquarters
of the world-wide Army and Air
Force Exchange Service were
announced this week.
Col. Benjamin F. Wood, QMC,
has been named director of the
merchandising division. His
last assignment was Inspector
General, Japan Area Command.
O. L. (Dick) Du Pre has been
named public relations director.”
The announcements were
made by Maj. Gen. Harlan C.
Parks, Chief of the Exchange
Service.
the rectifiers is 5-milliamperes.
The new silicon medium current
rectifiers are hermetically sealed
and can be used at full ratings
since no aging occurs in the sili-
con.
Machines Explained
FORT GEORGE G. MEADE, Md.
A general explanation of elec-
tronics data processing equipment,
which will be installed here in a
few months, was presented for 65
high-ranking military and eivilian
post employees by officials of the
Department of the Army Task
Force.
Purpose of the assemblage was
to orient the various officials with
electronic computing devices.
Those who attended will need in-
formation about electronics data
processing equipment (EDPE)
when a pilot project, now being
developed on post by the task
force, is completed sometime next
summer.
Two of the major problems at
military installations are those of
supply accounting and financial
management. Each supply item—
and there are hundreds of thou-
sands of them—must be catalogued
and stocked. When an item is
needed it must be requisitioned.
This means a tremendous a-
mount of accounting for military
management: item accounting, a
method of inventory control; fi-
nancial inventory accounting or ac-
counting in terms of dollars; stock
funding, a revolving fund for cer-
tain items and consumer funding,
money which is allotted for post
operations.
But such paperwork volume and
complexities are minimized by
EDPE, which records all informa-
tion about each item. Thus, if an
item is requested, the requisition
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is fed into the electronic equip-
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memory information, which at
present is on manual records.
Then information in the machine
will determine whether the item
is in stock or available or what
secondary action is necessary. In
addition to this, all
financial
records required are run off
simultaneously.
Radio Contract
FORT CARSON, Colo. — Land-
Air Incorporated of Chicago, under
government contract, is installing
the AN/ARC-44 radio and the
complete ultra high frequency
(UHF) radio set in Carson’s L-19
“A” model aircraft within the next
two months.
Six sheet-metal mechanics and
four electronics mechanics under
the supervision of Lee Mounger
and Al Rowe are performing the
installation of the new radios in
the Carson aircraft and several air-
craft from the Colorado and
Wyoming National Guard.
Projects officer for the radio
work being performed at Carson’s
air field is Lt. Col. Walter H. Cook
Jr.
New Connectors
TOLEDO, Ohio..— A new series
of connectors for coaxial cable as-
semblies is now available from H.
H, Buggie, Inc.
Designed for a wide variety of
electronic, industrial and military
applications, these high - voltage
coaxical connectors have a rated
corona level exceeding 15 kv a-c.
Size-for-size they also have higher
voltage handling capacities than
comparable designs.
All electrical connections are ac-
complished by molded-on pigtails
that may be ordered in varying
lengths to suit assembly require-
ments. Thus, no soldering cup is
required,
New Sprayer
FORT BELVOIR, Va. — Devel-
opment of a new wheel-mounted
insecticide mist sprayer, which also
can be carried in a vehicle such as
a jeep or light trucks, has been
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OCTOBER 19, 1957
ARMY TIMES 27
Wash.,
with the Ist Bat. Gp., 22d Inf.
and Lt. Fred Headley.
Anderson.
A Bird in the Hand
CARRYING a whirlybird waned ot Yakima ‘Cates Center,
are four members of the 4th Aviation Co.,
SP2 Herbert Baldwin, PFC Eugene Lorbiecki, Lt. Tom Ender
At the copter’s controls is Lt. John
stationed
The strong men are, from left,
announced by the Corps of Engi-
neers’ Research and Development
Laboratories.
Primarily for use by preventive
medicine companies, medical serv-
ice organizations and post engi-
neer personnel in normal insect
contro] operations, the sprayer also
ities. It can be used for quick
knock-down of flying insects at
open air theaters and other such
is of use in many civilian capac-
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SIL taceemnecmnsecese ee iu j
himmemescemesmersncomasnen
28 ARMY TIMES
OCTOBER 19, 1957
CAM
ERA
Many Topics Covered
At PSA's Convention
By JACOB DESCHIN
'NHERE was something for al-
most everybody at the Annual
Photographic Society of America’s
convention held this month in St.)
Louis, Mo. Amateur movies and
still pictures, color, stereo, nature
and even photojournalism interests
were served in talks, demonstra-
tions and shows.
The P.S.A., which has a member-
ship of about 10,- g 4
000 and is open to %,
anybody with a
photographic
hobby who wants
to join, has been
holding these®
meetings for al- (jg
most a quarter of %
a century. Mem-
bership is $10 a
year (which in-% ;,
cludes the month
ly O.S.A. journal) DESCHIN
and application is made to the So-
ciety’s headquarters at 2005 Wal-
nut Street, Philadelphia, Penna,
Hopping around from one sés-
sion to another, I gathered a few
nuggets of wisdom and experience,
of which herewith a fair sampling:
George W. Cushman of Long
Beach, Calif., and an authority on
his subject, gave a practical run-
down on adding sound to silent
movies. There are three types of
treatment, he said: commentary,
sound effects and music.
The first could be explanatory
narration, informative, entertain-
ing, a poetry recital, etc. Be sure
to keep your audience in mind
when writing commentary, he ad-
vised. Sound effects can be part
of a scene or off-stage sound and
should, of course, be appropriate to
the sense cf the action shown.
Music is generally used to create
a mood, taking its cue from the
content of the film.
* ” .
FOR THE BUDDING photo-
journalist, Arthur Rothstein, chief
photographer of Look Magazine,
showed slides from published pic-
iure stories to demonstrate the
various means by which photog-
raphers communicate through pic-
tures
Clifton C. Edom of the Univer-
sity of Missouri School of Journal-
ism, reported on the annual work-
shop he cowducts for the University
in various towns of Missouri. The
class, which meets for a week or
ten days, attempts in pictures to
describe and interpret what the
town looks !ike and how the people
live, suggesting their past and
their aspirations.
Leslie A. Campbell of Belcher-
town, Mass., related how he turn-
ed his backyard into a studio to
entice birds for their picture's
sake. He “imports” props from
the woods so he can control the
settings, lures his beautiful vic-
tims with peanut butter, and
wins exhibition honors in slide
competitions with the results.
[If you have been thinking that
silhouette pictures are limited, as
[ used.to, you should have been
with me at Grant M. Haist’s
(Rochester, N.Y.) illustrated talk
on “Black on White is Enough.”
The range of subject included na-
tuce, children, pattern, in all sea-
sons, in good and bad weather.
Look for forms, he said, rather
than full-tone subjects, and wait
fer moving objects and people to
arrange themselves agreeably for
the silhouette effect. Incidentally,
since many of his original prints
were toned, he had copied the
prints on Kodachrome slides, which
resulted in a truer copy of the
original than if black - and - white
slides had been used.
- . -
TO BALANCE things off, the
newly organized Techniques Divi-
sion of the Society presented a pro-
gram which included talks by man-
ufacturers’ representatives. Among
these were John I, Fish’s “sneak
review” of an upcoming Eastman
Kodak product, a panchromatic pa-
per for making black-and-white
prints from Kodacolor and Ekta-
color negatives. The results he
showed when compared with such
prints on conventional paper were
remarkable improvements.
For Ansco, Ira B. Current screen-
ed samples of movies made under
difficult lightings—room light, can-
dle light, street illumination, ete.—
on Ansco’s new A.S.A. 100 super
Anscochrome 16mm film. The film
is now available in limited quanti-
ties. The movie audience was im-
pressed.
James N. Huth, USAF, writes
from Italy for information about
marketing photographs. Among
his several questions is a request
for a list of books on photogra-
phy. The most complete one
(about 600 titles) I know of is
published by Amphoto, 33 West
60th Street, New York City.
This company is both publisher
and distributor and offers a copy
ques | 4 Offices in The United States »
= =
‘al as on =
JOURNALISTIC approach is
shown in this picture of the
New York Bowery by Andreas
Feininger of Life Magazine.
of its catalogue of available books
on photography free for the ask-
ing. He also asks for a book on the
legal aspects. of picture-taking. It
so happens that Amphoto now has
such a book in the works. It is
scheduled for publication in No-
vember. The title, “The Law for
Photographers,” the authors, Her-
schel B. Sarbin and George Chern-
off, who write the column, “Legal
Problems in Photography” for the
magazine Popular Photography.
The paper edition will be $1.95,
cloth $3.95. Incidentally, the same
magazine has a regular column on
“Money-Making Ideas”. by. George
B. Wright. Other questions on pic-
ture marketing are covered in Ar-
vel W. Ahlers’ helpful “Where &
How to Sell Your Pictures,” also
published by Amphoto.
Hawaii? Germany
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Civil Service Notes
Sputnik May Spur
<i Pay Rise
_ By XAVIER BOYLE ‘-
~ Sputnik, the Russian earth satellite that’s ripping up
outer space and American nervous systems, may have a
large effect on the salaries of civilian workers at Defense
missile installations.
Last spring, a long report on
government scientific and engi-
neering needs was prepared by a
committee headed by Philip
Young, former Civil Service Com-
mission chairman. It was sub-
mitted to the White House and was
promptly put in the cold storage
vault. (They’ve got a lot of re-
ports in there!)
“While its contents were not of-
ficially disclosed, the report is said
to include a system of flexibly ad-
justing salaries to get scientific
employees up with—and keep them
up with—private industry people.
Also recommended are higher
starting grades for college grad-
uates and no restrictions on the
number of super-grade jobs (GS-
16 to GS-18).
Other benefits and better meth-
ods of managing and using skilled
scientific personnel are said to be
included in the document.
Sputnik should shake the report
as loose as it shook official dec-
orum. Officials are getting back
to acting unruffled again, after a
week of some very frank state-
toante: but Government scientists
say privately that the government
will be forced to give more con-
- sideration to getting and keeping
good scientific personnel.
Even if missile and satellite pro-
grams aren’t speeded up, present
iijmetables are well known and the
Administration will not want to
take the risk of failure.
NCO Academy
Reopens at Riley
FORT RILEY, Kans. — Fort
Riley’s Non-Commissioned Officers
Academy has resumed operations
at Wainwright Hall and the Lower
Parade Ground.
The students were 31 officers
and enlisted men, who took a five-
fay course of intensive instruc-
t'on- designed to prepare them
physical training instructors.
‘even of the students are from
‘ort Carson, Colo., and the re-
mainder from Fort Riley units.
The ‘class was the first of four
consecutive groups which will be
hold here during the month for
‘fficers and enlisted men of Riley
and other military installations of
the Fifth Army area.
Courses in Army administration,
leadership, methods of instruction
and other subjects designed to de-
volop non-commissioned officers
will be conducted at the NCO
Academy during the. 1957-1958
school program here.
4th Armd. Div. Hq.
To Be in Goppingen
FORT HOOD, Tex. — Fourth
Armd. Div. Hq. announced that the
fyroscoping 4th will be located in
the Goppingen area in Germany
:ither than in the Bad Kreuznach
"ea as originally announced. The
‘ange in location was made to
eet the operational needs of the
eventh Army in Europe.
Fourth Armd. Div. Hq. will be
cated about 30 miles east of
uttgart. This area is presently
cupied by the 8th Inf. Div. which
will move to the Bad Kreuznach
rea when the 2nd Armd. Div.
makes its gyroscope move to Fort
Hood.
An important point, of course,
is that Congress will be much more
willing to go along with added
benefits for scientific personnel.
And the Senate subcommittee in-
vestigation of the missiles pro-
grams will undoubtedly touch on
the civilian personnel aspect.
The Civil Service Commission is
expected to give approval soon to
the Navy’s request that it be al-
lowed to pay the top rate of the
grade to scientist and engineers
in Grades GS-5 to GS-15. A sign
of things te come, oteervers say.
JOHN BURRIS, National Em-
ployment Director of the Disabled
American Veterans is reminding
disabled vets that they have no
special retention rights over other
veterans during reductions-in-
force.
Such vets have a 10-point pref-
erence during hiring but this does
not apply during reductions in
force. All veterans enjoy reten-
tion preference over non-vets dur-
ing reductions.
There apparently has been some
confusion on this point and DAV
is getting many inquiries about it.
The DAV has been pushing a
bill by Rep. Ed Rees (R., Kan.)
which would give disabled vets
additional retention points accord-
ing to degree of disability. Those
rated $0 percent or more disabled
by the VA would get 10 additional
retention points. Those over 80
percent disabled would get nine
points, and so on to one point
those 10 percent disabled.
“What do you mean, I’m not
affectionate—I’m hugging
you right now!”
Seek and Ye
Shall Find
FORT RICHARDSON, Alaska. —
“Seek and ye shall find,” ever
though you have to search months
on end. That’s what Capt. John
A. Quigley, 1st Bat. Gp., 23d Inf.,
did after he lost his gold wedding
band last February.
The captain was commanding of-
ficer of the 23d Tank Co., on ‘ma-
neuvers “Operation Hardtimes”
when he lost the ring. The maneu-
ver area took in more than 3000
square miles.
Since then, each time the cap-
tain has been in the field he has
searched for the ring.
Finally on Sept. 25 the captain
once again took up the search. And
this time he found the ring. It
was on the side of a hill, easily
visible. Capt. Quigley remember-
ed using his helmet while washing
one morning and emptying the
water on the side of the hill.
The ring had evidently come off
his finger, and was then carried
off by the soapy water.
“Next time I’m in the field,”
said the captain, “I'll wear it on
a chain around my neck.”
Redstone Post
REDSTONE ARSENAL, Ala.
— Col. John M. Woestenburg has
been appointed assistant deputy
post commander here, it was an-
nounced by Col. Keith T. O’Keefe,
deputy CO.
OCTOBER 19, 1957
ARMY TIMES 29
Roberts, Hunter Liggett,
Ord Use Cargo Shuttle
FORT ORD, Calif. — In the past
five months, 4,482,829 pounds of
cargo have been moved between
here and the Camp Roberts-Hunter
Liggett area in a shuttle service
operated by the Transportation
Section here. This new, improved
system of operation between Fort
Ord, the Language School, Camp
Roberts and Hunter Liggett Mili-
tary Reservation was introduced
last May 1.
These new changes have result-
ed in estimated savings of 29,120
manhours; $36,400 in labor costs;
275,000 vehicle miles; and $8,268
in vehicle costs.
Lt. Col. Bruce Martin, -trans-
portation officer, said that prior to
this new freight service operation,
units and activities located at
Camp Roberts and Hunter Liggett
dispatched numerous vehicles each
week to Fort Ord for the purpose
of obtaining materials, equipment
and supplies.
Because of the distances in-
volved (Hunter Liggett being ap-
proximately 67 miles and Camp
Roberts 100 miles away), this prac-
tice consumed many manhours and
incurred considerable operational
costs. There were an average of
more than 50 vehicles, with two
men per vehicle, in transit per
week at a substantial cost.
The service now operates two
round trips daily — Monday
through Friday. Requests for a
pick-up of cargo may be submit-
ted by phone to the Transportation
Section consolidation point, one
Name General's Aide
SEOUL, ‘ Korea. — First Lt.
Stanley W. Brooks, was named
aide-de-camp to Brig. Gen. Charles
J. Timmes, Director of Training,
Army Advisory Group, Korea
(KMAG).
YOUR POLICY
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Hove you hod any illness or injuries in the pos! three yeors?
Hove you ever been declined or posiponed for life insuronce?.
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BASIC RATE SAME AS NSLI PRICE TO 195)
Are you now drawing flight pey? Yes (}
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Insurance Age
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insurance being applied for ond to be edded to stondard rote on rote char! Check opprepricte box.
This additional premium is removed when Insured changes fo permanent ground duty ond decrecses
| Pilots & Flight Surgeons |_ Crow Members
1# no, give detoils.”
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if yes, give details*
(*Use Additional Poper)
Stote your rating.
(Pilots engaged in adminis-
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Age 25-29 1.00
Age 20-39 50 [-}
Age 40 and over 25 CL)
then odd te standard rote from rate chart of left.
BASIC RATE SAME AS NSLI PETOR TO 1951
Multiply oppropricte additional rete by number of thousends of insuronce protection being purchosed,
(1) Poratrooper, Airborne Infontry ond Submorine Service — All ages $ .25
75 () trotive duties who fly only te
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Premium will be paid by: (1) ellotment (give effective dot
The obo-e emwen ond stotemens mode by on on gonpicte = true, they
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LICENSED AGENTS NEEDED IN SOME STATES — WRITE AND GiVE QUALIFICATIONS
day prior to the desired pick-up
time. The number and types of
vehicles dispatched are contingent
upon the quantity and class of
materials to be transported. There
is a minimum of documentation,
due to an effective system of re-
ceipts; and there have been no
losses. ‘
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1 Car titled in (state) wer
Cost of car $
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et
30 ARMY TIMES
OCTOBER 19, 1957
Award for Army Field Band
Certificate of Achievement.
THE ARMY FIELD BAND, which recently returned from a suc-
cessful European tour, was honored recently when Army Sec-
retary Wilber M. Brucker presented the organization the Army’s
Here, Maj. Chester E. Whiting,
CO and director of the band, accepts the award at a oremeny
in the Pentagon courtyard. The band was cited for “super
musicianship, exemplary conduct and military appearance dur-
ing a tour of 40 cities in 12 European countries.”
Machine Tracks Traffic
Violators at Ft. Bragg
FORT BRAGG, N.C. — The light
at the corner was red, but a 1952
blue and white Chevrolet cut
through, swerving dangerously,
tires screaming protest. It was
almost dark, but the soldier pe-
destrian who had had to make a
mad leap for his life as the car
bore down on him caught a glimpse
of an Indiana license plate} He
telephoned his report to the Mili-
tary Police
Within a half-hour, the MPs
knew the name of the driver, the
number of his post tags and his
state plates. They caught him, of
course
There are about 30,000 troops at
Fort Bragg. There are more than
23,000 privately-owned vehicles.
Keeping track of all of them is
the job of the vehicle registra-
tion branch of the Provost Mar-
shal’s office. Chief clerk, and the
operation’s head man, is SFC
Charles D. Hurst. He is assisted
by Sgt. Billy E. Houston and a
staff of eight men and one WAC,
They run a busy section. Be-
sides registering every car, motor
scooter and motorcycle on the
post, keeping track of insurance
expiration dates, assisting in giv-
ing state driving license tests and
issuing parking permits, they work
with the apprehension branch of
the military police in incidents
like the one — fictitious by the
way — involving the lawless’ Chev-
rolet
” * *
TO_ FIND OUT who owns any
particular car, all Sgt. Hurst does
is feed some information to a com-
plicated new office machine. The
color, year, and the make of the
car, for instance. He then sets a
couple of pins and runs selected
groups of metal plates through it.
It’s a quick sorting job. The
plates on cars that might be sus-
pect are dropped out, and within
about 15 minutes the process of
elimination has narrowed down to
a point where it’s usually possible
to pinpoint the particular car in-
volved
About 200 cars
a day at Bragg
are registered
Information on
all of them is filed three ways —
alphabetically by ownership, by
decal numbers, and by .make.
Other files are set up according
te state tag numbers and insur-
ance expiration dates.. It’s possi-
ble to answer within minutes in-
quiries concerning illegally parked
cars, abandoned cars, or other cars
about which law enforcement of-
ficials may want information.
But information is available only
to personnel authorized to have it.
“We sometimes have calls,” Hurst
says, “from people who say they’re
sure they’ve seen’ somebody they
used to know driving such-and-
such a car, decal number such-and-
such. We'd like to be able to help
them — but we can’t do it.”
« 7 o
FORT BRAGG is a mechanized
post — in more than the strictly
military sense. It’s overrun with
private cars — from one 30-year-
old Nash still in good condition,
through a variety of foreign jobs,
to glittering new ’57 Cadillacs, Lin-
colns~and Chrysler Imperials.
Most of ethem are driven by
drivers who know what they’re
doing — and the low incidence of
traffic violations at Bragg in com-
parison with that of any civilian
community of comparable size
proves it.
That’s no reflection on the ordi-
nary civilian’s skill as a driver.
The soldier-driver, too, is more
‘reckless off the post than on, a
fact which probably makes a case
for the point that one of the cures
for the mounting toll of highway
deaths is stricter rules, and more
rigid enforcement.
One problem the military driver
has, though, that his civilian coun-
terpart doesn’t — getting the post
decal off when he moves away.
Hurst advises “patience and paint
remover.”
3 Assigned Bay
Area TTC Posts
FORT MASON, Calif. — As-
signment of three officers at the
Bay Area Terminal Center was
announced recently by Col. Thomas
R. W. Skinner, Commander.
Named as director of services,
with headquarters at Fort Mason,
was Col. Erman M. Newman.
Operating at Oakland Terminal
will be Lt. Col. Thomas L. Harri-
gan as chief of freight traffic div.;
and Lt. Col. James M. Sprake as
Be og hb se ge
“LOCATOR FILE
WILSON, Sgt. Frank, formerly
of Btry. C, 20th FA Bn., contact
SFC Dale L. Johnson, Btry. B, 2d
How Bn., 7th Arty., APO 36, N.Y.
*
MASHBURN, MSzgt. William E.,
formerly with the Mannheim, Ger-
Sheridan Seeks
Donations for
Museum Display
FORT SHERIDAN, Ill. — Plans
have been in order since the lat-
ter part of July for a post museum
here, under the direction of Col.
John W. Hammond, post comman-
der. Many items relating to the
picturesque past of the post have
been collected and _ renovated
purpose of obtaining showpieces
for the museum.
With the hope of opening the
museum in the near future a final
plea for any one with relics repre-
senting the 1880 period of history,
or relating to Gen. Sheridan’s
military career are asked to con-
tact Richard E. Puckett, Special
Services museum director at Fort
Sheridan. Such objects as uni-
forms, books, pictures, weapons,
maps or anything depictng the past
history of the post are being
sought.
As soon as the museum is com-
plete it will be open to the public
for tours. The museum will be
located. in the Indian Room of the
Fort Sheridan Tower.
Soldier of Year
WITH THE 24TH INF. DIV.,
Korea. — Sgt. Olla Estes, a squad
leader in K Co., 21st Inf:, has been
chosen “Soldier of the Year” in
the 24th Div. He was given an
immediate promotion to sergeant
first class during the award.
through donations with the express |
many Stockade, contact MSgt.
Frank Bryan, Heidelberg, Ger-
many, °
HIPP, Col. Macon A., formerly
in Viet Nam,
CARP, Edward M., and
YERKS, Robert G., formerly at
Fort Dix,
GALLAGHER, Daniel P., for-
merly at Fort Monmouth,
MOLE, Robert A., formerly at
East Brunswick, N.J.,
PAULSON, John, and
KOOS, Lt. Frank S., formerly
at Fort Lewis,
HONEYCUTT, ist Lt. W. F., for-
merly at Fort Benning.
BERRINGER, John G., formerly
at Tacoma, Wash.,
SMITH, ist Lt: Tommie G., for-
merly at Fort Knox,
TRACEY, Bernard, formerly of
Boston, N.Y.,
GREGOR, Fred V., formerly. of
West Albany, N.Y.,
GARRETSON, Lloyd W., former-
ly of Pottstown, Pa., and
MacKENZIE, Lt. Col. first name
unknown, formerly with 30th Int.,
contact Harry Cedar, Secretary,
National Hq., 3d Div. Society, 1129
Warner Bldg., Wash. 4, D.C.
e
MACK, SFC Elbert, formerly at
Fort Benitting, and
Warranted, New Shade 44
een elastique wool blouse,
19.50; Overseas cap, 2.50.
Dress blue officers uniform,
Elastique or Barathea,:
blouse, trousers, shoulder
straps, cap, with Nylon Em-
broidevy, 78.00; with metalic
gold embroidery, 85.00, field
gtade with gold bullion yi-
sor, 95.00; enlisted men’s
blue uniform with cap, 67.00
Write for cloth swatches and
measuring blanks. rade
equipment, miniature medals,
etc. Catalog free.
MARTIN KAHN
440 East 138 St., Bronx 54, N.Y.
—
SMILEY, SFC James, formerly
Thomas W. Carr, Stu. Trng. Co.
E, Fort Gordon, Ga.
Announcing
1, Full protection —$25,000—
to age 55, while your fam-
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2. Poid Up Life Insurance —
$10,000—after age 55. Ne
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A, Have $10,000-Cash a few
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B, Hove from $15,000 t&
$27,000 of whole life In-
surance with increasing cash
values.
For full information, write your name,
address and date of birth on the
margin of this ad and mail today te
GENERAL SERVICES
LIFE INSURANCE CO,
910 17th St., N.W., Washington 6, D.C.
at Fort Chaffee, contact Sgt.
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. F. Ponzar, Mrs. T.|
W. Cooke, Mrs. J. J. Lane and Mrs. |
A. R. Glafka.
Mrs. Brucker Feted
WASHINGTON — Mrs: Wilber
M,. Brucker, wife of the Secretary
of the Army, was the honored guest
at a luncheon given by the Trans-
seen Corps Women’s Club this
w
Mrs..George L. Barnes was chair-
man for this affair, ‘She Was as-
sisted by Mrs, Ray J. Cox, Mrs.
Harold C. Towe and Mrs. Donald
J. Malone.
Fashion Show Held
FORT POLK, La. — “Fashions
Around the Clock” was the theme
of the annual fashion show pre-
sented at the October meeting of
the Officers Wives Club.
Members of the club, and their
daughters, modeled fashions in
soortswear, street and after-five
clothing, formals and lingerie.
Models included: Mrs. Howard
Cooperider, Mrs, Phillip B. David-
son Jr., Mrs. Horace Geiger, Mrs.
Daniel Grunvig, Mrs, Richard
Mamm, Miss Tony. Harding, Mrs.
ohn Harrop, Mrs. George V. Laba-
die, Miss Ann Lenhardt, Mrs. Les-
ter McGee, Mrs. Luis Mercado,
Mrs. Karl Miesel Jr., Mrs. James
Oliver, Mrs. Thomas Peyton, Mrs.
W. W. Redmond, Mrs, John A.
Rieser, Mrs, Edmund Socha, Mrs.
Clark R. Starnes, Mrs. Joseph D.
White and Mrs, Wolfer.
Mrs, Henry E.. Davidson Jr.,
club program chairman, introduced
the’ show. Staging and decora-
tions were by the ladies of Com-
bat Command B. Joseph Macie-
jewski played organ music through-
out the program.
‘Daughters’ Lunch
FORT BENNING, Ga. — A
Halloween luncheon was given by
Daughters of the U.S. Army in-the
Main Officers’ Mess.
Mrs. ‘Robert Dickerson: and Mrs.
David E. Wright were hostesses
for the event.
A large scarecrow and tub filled
with red apples. for. bobbing cen-
tered. the luncheon table. Pump-
kins graced each end ‘of ‘the ‘table
and tiny jack-o-lanterns and au-
‘umn leaves and flowers were scat-
‘sored the-length of the -board.
sange baskets of corn candies
‘ 2corated place’ settings and the
iace cards featured sketches of
_ack-o-lanterns,
Mrs. George E. Lynch, wife of
Maj. Gen, (Ret.) Lynch, was wel-
comed back as a member of the
chapter. ~ Mrs. Nelson I. Fooks,
wife of Col, (Ret.) Fooks, was a
First Tea Draws 300;
ors Mrs. Brucker
h Hon
For 4
& About
OMEN
OCTOBER 19, 1957
ARMY TIMES 31
MISS Barbora Delmore, daugh-
ter of Col. and Mrs. Fred J.
Delmore, Army Chemical Cen-
ter,. Md., will appear as a
singer and dancer’in the new
musical, “Music Man,” open-
ing at the Shubert Theater in
Philadelphia on Noy. 18. Last
ear Miss Delmore worked with
he Footlighters, the Chemical
Center's amateur _ theatrical
group.
guest and was introduced as a new
member.
AA Wives Hold Tea
ARMY CHEMICAL CENTER,
Md. — Officers wives of the AA
greup on post honored Mrs. Ray-
mond B. Firehock and Mrs. Henry
Krier at a tea.
Mrs. Firehock and. Mrs. Krier
are the wives of the newly as-
signed commanding officer and
executive officer, respectively, of
the 17th AAA Group, =
Motoring from Fort Meade to at-
tend the affair, were Mrs. Paltier
Edwards, wife of Maj. Gen. Ed-
wards; Mrs. Charles G. Dunn,
whose husband, Brig. Gen. Dunn,
is brigade commander of the 35th
AA Brigade; Mrs. Vernon R. Rott-
stedt and Mrs. Lukas E. Hoska Jr.
Among the ladies presiding at
the tea table were Mrs. Edward
B. . Rouse . Jr., “Mrs. . Edgar. .S.
Waugh, Mrs, Robert V. A. Stamper
and Mrs, Edgar G. Conner. ,
Fell Styles Shown
FORT JACKSON, 8.C. — Sev-
eral hundred members and guests
of. the. Women’s ‘Club were pres-
ent at. the fall fashion show pre-
setited at Legion Lake. Officers’
Club. The show followed a social
hour and dinner.
Ladies of the 1st Training Regt.,
under the leadership of Mrs. Joe
M. Sanders, presented the show.
Those modeling were: Mrs. Ona
Brock, Mrs. Phyllis Del Hotal, Mrs.
Alice Serbousek, Mrs. Mildred Car-
penter, Mrs. Mary Shultz, Mrs.
Faith Smith, Mrs. Ida Thomas, Mrs.
‘| Mary Bollero, Mrs. Pat Skeirik,
Mrs. Fran Kopplin, Mrs. Peggy
Anthony, Mrs. Bess Marie Robert-
son, Mrs. Mary Graeser, Mrs. Pat
Hummel and Mrs. Nell Ghent.
| Register Honored
ABERDEEN PROVING
GROUND, Md. — Mrs. H. A. Elli-
son and Mrs. O. P. Bruno were
hostesses for the Ballistics Re-
search Ladies luncheon held in
honor of Mrs, Charles L. Register,
whose husband, Col. Register, di-
rector of Ballistics Research Labo-
ratories, is retiring.
Farewell Tea Held
OGDEN, Utah. — Autumn hues
of yellow and bronze formed the
background setting for a farewell
tea honoring’ Mrs. Fulton G.
Thompson at the Utah General
Depot Officers’ Club. Col. Thomp-
son, CO, is retiring from active
service,
One hundred gtiests were greet-
ed by Mrs. Thompson, Mrs. Buford
Pittman, wife of the deputy com-
mander ,and the club officers: Mrs.
E. H. Toliver, Mrs, John H. Cates,
Mrs. T. D. Chisman, Mrs. A. H.
Beaudry and Mrs, Paul J. Funk.
Presiding at the tea table were
Mrs. W. O. Pell, Mrs. Ward Arm-
strong, Mrs. Frank M. Browning,
Mrs, Irwin Miller, Mrs. Elmer
Ward, Mrs. James E. Widman,
Mrs. G, T. Hone, Mrs. W. Rulon
White, Mrs.’ Pearle Robey, Mrs.
Francis B. Risser, Mrs, G. B. Mc-
Gary, Mrs. L. L. Skinner, Mrs. El-
den H. Dye, Mrs. Pittman, Mrs.
David H. Gregg and Mrs. Cates.
A background of instrumental
music was provided by a trio com-
posed of Mrs. Anthony J. Lund,
Mrs. R. L. Draper and Mrs. Francis
G. Nicholas.
New Class Welcomed
WASHINGTON — Maj. Gen. R.
P. Hollis, commandant of the In-
dustrial College of the Armed
Forces, and Mrs. Hollis, welcomed
the 1957-58 resident class at an in-
formal reception held in the Fort
MeNair Officers’ Club.
The. reception was highlighted
by the presence of Gen. Nathan
F. Twining, chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff; Adm. Arleigh
Burke, Chief of Naval Operations;
Gen. Thomas D. White, chief of
staff of the Air Force; Gen. L. L.
Lemnitzer, vice chief of staff of
the Army; Lt. Gen. V. J. McCaul,
assistant commandant of the Ma-
rine Corps; and their wives.
Au Revoir
FORT LAWTON, Wash. — Mem-
bers of the Officers Wives Club
said a reluctant farewell recently
to their president, Mrs. Lowe H.
Herndon, who has moved to New
Orleans. Her husband, Col. Hern-
don, former director of adminis-
tration at the Seattle Army Ter-
minal, has been transferred to the
Gulf Transportation Terminal
Command,
DATE LINE:
Washington
_ By Carol Arndt
IS morning’s mail brought a
letter asking me to pass along
to service wives a plan whereby
they can earn money in their spare
time. - It sounded so good that I
checked with the Better Business
‘Bureau here in Washington to
make sure the outfit is legitimate.
It is.
Manpower, Inc., has worked out
a work-travel plan tailored to fit
the working needs of service wives
who want part-time jobs through-
out the year, or temporary jobs
while their husbands are overseas
or while they are waiting to join
them at foreign stations.
The plan works like this:
The service wife takes qualifica-
tion tests and is interviewed at the
branch office located in the city
where she wishes to work. She
becomes an employee of Manpower,
Inc., and is paid by it.
It also takes care of her unem-
ployment compensation, social se-
curity and liability insurance while
on the job In addition she is
konded for $25,000. She is then
referred by telephone to the or-
ganization needing her services.
Manpower, in turn, bills the office
for her services. Pay rates are
based on the going wage for her
type of work in the particular state
in which she is working.
When itis necessary for a serv-
ice wife to leave the area in which
she has been working, she applies
for a certificate that is then hon-
ored by any other Manpower of-
fice and she doesn’t need to take
tests to establish her qualifications
in a new locality. She may go
from city to city, stay near her
husband, earn her way and keep
as busy as her spare time permits.
Or, she may take a temporary job
to help handle holiday bills or to
send the youngsters to summer
camp.
These jobs may last a day, a
week, a month, a year, or longer,
depending on availability. They
include such work as typing, sten-
ography, secretarial, clerical, busi-
ness machines, and even acting as
receptionists and models at con-
ventions,
“In fact,” I was told by the man-
ager of the Washington office when
{ called for details, “anything and
everything, as long as it is legiti-
mate. You name it, we can do it.”
So, if you aren’t trained in any
particular field, chances are good
they’ll be able to locate a job to
suit your capabilities anyway.
The company has more than 100
branches in the States. It has two
in Canada; one in Cuba; two in
England; one in France; two in
Belgium; one in Italy and one in
Johannesburg, South Africa.
This work plan was started by
a'couple of attorneys in Chicago
about eight years ago. They felt it
was a good way to save a service
wife the embarrassment of leaving
an employer at a time when her
services were needed most, but the
time had come to fold her tent and
follow her husband to his next
Army post.
I have a list of the branch of
fices of this organization and if
you’d like to contact one, drop me
a card. Be sure to tell me the
name of the largest nearby city
so that [ may select the address of
the closest Manpower branch for
you.
Orchids for the Aide’s Wife
MRS. LEMUEL MATHEWSON,
right, wife of the newly ap-
pointed Sixth Army commander, Lt. Gen. Mathewson, receives
an orchid corsage from Mrs. J. G. Ondrick, president of the
Woman's Club of the Presidio of San Francisco, Colif.
Just
six days after the Mathewsons arrived in San Francisco the
general was selected to serve as Queen Elizabeth’s military
aide and escort during her visit fo the States.
He returned
east to assume these temporary duties. The rest of the Math-
ewson family stayed home to watch him ond the queen on
television.
82. ARMY -TIMES
OCTOBER .19,. 1957 ‘
ABOUT THE ‘OLD DAYS’ AT CARSON Be
~ 4
Drapes Plus Lots of Ima nat
Turn Hospital Ward into Home
By RUTH T. MARSHALL
After some “umpteen”
years as one of those “who
also serve” I’d like to expound
on the subject of making the
best out of what you have at
hand.
We had been stationed at Fort
Richardson, Alaska during War II
years, and in January ’47, my hus-
band received PCS orders for the
States. The thermometer was hov-
ering around 42 BELOW at An-
chorage.
Our destination was Camp Car-
son, Colo., and we were both
elated at this assignment. We
had read all about the high, cold
climate of this station, and felt it
not too great a contrast to the ex-
treme cold in Alaska,
At the billeting office we were
told there were no available quar-
ters on the post; and moved into
a hotel room in a nearby town
while waiting for an Army couple
on overseas orders to vacate an
apartment
Hardly settled in this abode, we
received mandatory orders to
take quarters on the Army reser-
vation at once.
Adequate quarters at Carson, in
the year '47 consisted of one wing
of the station hospital turned over
to the Billeting Office, with “no
changes or renovation made,” for
occupancy by Army personnel.
Each family, regardless of number
of dependents, rank or other stat-
us, was housed there. Our quar-
ters had formerly been a 40-bed
hospital ward, complete’ with
numerous little rooms used as doc-
tor’s office, nurses’ office, and
boasted among other things, la-
trines and basins galore. The
large end room which had been
the 40-bed ward, was waxed and
| A
sonne] at our last station), I pro-
Be. nS eR
s ™
Readers’ Forum —
E BELIEVE it takes versatility and adaptability to be a service
wife. Service wives must often face situations that call fort N
resourcefulness, charm, common sense, sign language and/or a kitchen
knowledge of a foreign tongue.
Telling of your-experience in dealing successfully with problems
common to service wives may help others to a better understanding of
daily issues.
Army Times will buy short (about 1000 words) manuscripts along
these lines written by women and addressed to women readers.
Club and the
Wives
Club at funch-
eon and dinner
parties given in
her honor.
At the dinner . HART
Mrs. B. W. Griffin, president of
the NCO Wives Club, presented.
a first echelon maintenance on
closet, shelves, and on the kitchen,
which looked completely inade-
quate for small family cooking.
But it proved to be quite adequate,
and very cheerful, after I had put
up my bright yellow curtains and
all my wall gadgets.
I took a long look at the tiny
rooms that had served as offices
with their attached basins and
commodes; and vowed that no
Jatrine orderly would find me lack-
ing in that department. I had
drapes in abundance, all lengths,
widths and colors. With QM fur-
niture supplementing our furni-
ture (a conglomeration of pieces
bought from other departing per-
ceeded to do what my husband
depended on me to do, try to make
it “look like home.” ing
One big problem was the huge| /2&44 , .
latrine in back near the “bowling BY i American Girl
alley” or ward entrance. This ap-| fam American Home
parently had served as community m Argosy
/
bath for all ward patients. It con- be,
sf,
Magazine:
sisted of a bathub in a shower stall,| {a Atlantic Monthly 6.00 5.50 5.50 Motor Trend
with a 2 by 4 plank flooring for Me Better Homes & Gardens 3.60 2.00 2.00 Newsweek
the shower. The odor of clorox i Boy’s Lif 3.00" 2.00 1.00
and other disinfectants clung to| ja Fe Se . ape elles New Yorker
this area. I put my gardenia bath| ‘4 Changing Times 6.00 5.00 4.50 Outdoor Life
crystals to good use here, and soon hea Charm 3.50 3.00 3.00 Parents’ Magazine
had it smelling (my husband said “8 Children’s Digest 3.50 1.50 2.50 Playboy
stinking) good.
What to do ‘about the several eo
urinals was the subject of amusing as
Compact
Consumer Reports
eee i to lb yr Bango = and much heated discussion. Final-| i Coronet 2.50 2.50 2.00 Popular Science Monthly 3.40
og . don “- : "the af nec dP ly I dug up an old shower curtain RAS. Ebony 3.50 3.00 3.00 Radio & Television News 4.00
alle - ne ms ; ow"lQ& | and two large bed sheets. With ta Ellery Queen’s Mystery 4.00 3.00 3.00 Reader’s Digest
. Hf : “chail , these I rigged a sort of camouflage, if Esquire 6.00 4.00 3.00 Redbook Magazine
mere Was a irec cnalenge ic . > sffective ‘ y ~s ~ a
atere ar Bt oe Pat whic h prove d ‘ ffective as a room iM Field. & Stream 3.50 2.50 2.00 Saturday Evening Post 6.00
é YY, ing : divider and screened the details. iy topes ‘
TIENCE and fortitude! We sat We took heart at the fact that ie Flying 4.00 3.00 3.00 Saturday Review
on the bare floor of the long hall-| we shared the long (and chilly)| ‘Age Fortune 10.00 850 8.50 Seventeen
way to study thé. possibilities of|ramps from our wing to the hos- rw Glamour 2.75 .2.15 2.715 Sporting News
this new home. pital proper with numerous other| i377 Good Housekeeping 3.50. 2.00 2.75 Sports Afield
A‘~redeeming feature was the| families. Not without its com-| 7m Harper’s Bazaar 5.00 2.50 3.75 Sports Hlustrated
enormous linen closet or utility| pensation was the fact that RHIP| ‘4 Harper’s Magazine 6.00 4.00 4.00 Time
room, which my husband quickly|did not apply on the Garrison.| 3% - Holiday 5.00 3.00 3.00
took over and put on “off limits” It was just another stepping-| -'4 Hot Rod 3.50 3.00 3.00 Today's Health
to unauthorized personnel, (mean-| stone toward the many interesting | »27i@ House & . Garden 5.00 3.00 3.00 True
ing me). He immediately started ' tours of duty in store for us. og House Beautiful 5.00 2.50 3.75 TV Guide
Se aiiiieeesenaeai mas ay. Jack & Jill 3.50 3.00 3.00 U.S. Camera
at Ladies’ Home Journal 3.50 2.50 3.00 US. News &
AUTO INSURANCE | @ tho: ce ere
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‘and co-chairman,
: ORDNANCE WIVES at Fort Hood, Tex., visited the post ord-
nance shop on “Know Your Husband's Job” day.
Preparing to
enter an M-103 tank ore, from left, Mrs. Richard J. Peter,
“wife of the post ordnance officer, and Mrs. Jerome Stevenson,
whose husband is the II! Corps ordnance officer.
Surgeons’ Wives Will View
Presidents’ Wives Gowns
WASHINGTON—Visiting ladies
Will be well entertained while their
surgeon husbands attend the 64th
annual convention of the Associa-
tion of Military Surgeons of the
U.S. at the Hotel Statler on Oct.
28, 29 and 30.
A ladies’ entertainment commit-
tee, headed by Mrs. Charles S. Ger-
soni, wife of Col.
Gersoni of the
Physical _ Stand-
atds Research
Department, Wal-
ter Reed Army
Institute of Re-
search, has been
at work for
months planning
this entertain-’
ment. 3
Mrs. Gersoni
Mrs. Gersoni
Mrs. Payl I. Rob-
inson, wife of Maj. Gen. Robinson,
are being assisted by Mrs. Ralph
O. Anderson, Mrs. Robert E. Bit-
ner, Mrs. James H. Forsee, Mrs.
Charles Gingles, Mrs. Robert Kim-
berly, Mrs. Kenneth Nelson, Mrs.
James B. Nuttall, Mrs. John Pat-
ton, Mrs. William Silliphant and
Mrs. J. H. Smith.
For Oct. 28 the committee has
scheduled a tour of Old George-
town and Old Alexandria.
The next day the visitors will
see the gowns of presidents’ wives
at the Smithsonian Institution in
the morning and go on to a lunch-
eon and fashion show at Bolling
AFB Officers’ Club.
At the luncheon they will hear
a talk by Dr. Leonard Carmichael,
secretary of the Smithsonian, on
“The Development of American
Reception at Benning
FORT BENNING, Ga—aA Sun-
day afternoon reception held at the
Main Post Officers’ Club was the
occasion for greeting hundreds of
newly arrived 3d Div. officers and
ladies and bidding farewell to
Brig. Gen. and Mrs. William A.
Harris. The Harrises are leaving
for a new assignment.
In the receiving line with Maj.
Gen. and Mrs. Roy E. Lindquist
were Gen. and Mrs. Harris and Mrs.
John-®. Leary, wife of Brig. Gen.
Taste as Illustrated at the Smith-
sonian Institution.”
Mrs. Robinson will preside at the
luncheon and Mrs. Amos R. Koontz
of Baltimore, Md., honorary chair-
man of the entertainment commit-
tee and wife of the president of
the association, will introduce the
guests of honor.
A guided tour of the Armed
Forces Medical Museum is set for
the morning of their last day in
Washington.
Reservations for the luncheon
and fashion show have been opened
to women members of military
families stationed in the Washing-
ton area and wives of members of
civilians allied medical groups.
Requests for reservations should
be mailed to the. office of the As-
sociation of Military Surgeons of
the U.S., Suite 718, New Medical
Bldg., 1726 Eye St., N.W. Tickets
may be picked up on Oct. 27 and
28 at the Hotel Statler headquar-
ters of the convention,
Monmouth Club
Hears General
FORT MONMOUTH, NJ. —
The Women’s Club held its open-
ing luncheon of the fall season
with Maj. Gen. W. Preston Girder-
man, post commander, as “guest
commander. 52 ‘bk
The general, speaking on the
subject “The Army Wife,” stress-
ed that it is important “at a post
as big as this that we have a con-
genial and happy community.”
The general pointed out, “The
Army of the future can be only
as good as the man whom we bring
in as lieutenants now.” Young of-
ficers, he said, will be more apt to
stay in the service if their wives
realize that Army life is good.
The luncheon was the first to
be attended by Mrs. Corderman,
the new -honorary president, and
Mrs. A. F. Cassevant, wife of Brig.
Gen. Cassevant, honorary vice-
president.
Mrs. Charles L. Olin was lunch-
eon chairman, and Mrs. W. H.
Churehwell, co-chairman. Mrs.
Trevett Williams was in charge of
decorations.
Mrs. Warren. H. Amason, presi-
dent, welcomed the members and
their guests.
OCTOBER 19, 1957
ARMY TIMES 88
COME IN!
Coftee Break
With Karla Edwards
I guess it is a tried and true magazine advertising law
that a picture of an alluring gir) will sell almost anything.
The ads for hosiery, make-up, hand lotions, mattresses and
such, are certainly more attractive with a pretty girl in the
picture. But recently as I glanced through my new magazines
I failed to find the connection between this suggestive type
of picture and such unlikely products as new trucks, aspirin,
breakfast cereal, paint, grass
@ There is really no excuse
for faded clothes any more. With
the better-than-ever dyes for home
use on the market, it’s really a
cinch to cover up faded streaks in
curtains or have really blue blue-
jeans again. I've dyed everything
from our boy’s faded blue jeans
and T-shirts to bedspreads and
towels. I don’t mean necessarily
changing the color. . but just a
few “dye jobs” can brighten up a
whole wardrobe.
I was rather disappointed in
the movie “Jeanne Eagles” after
all the adjectives that were used
to describe it. “Shocking,” “sin-
ful,” “sad,” “serene,” “sacred,”
seed, dog food and erasers!
\
said one review. I’m afraid I
thought parts of it were quite
“shallow!”
@ The other day we were dis-
cussing the idea of getting a sta-
tion-wagon to accommodate our
growing family. Our young son
thought this just fine, and then
asked hopefully, “After the station-
wagon, then are we going to get
a bus or a truck?”
OVERHEARD: “When my wife
comes home from a luncheon and
an afternoon of playing bridge,
she isn’t hungry. And the kids and
I may as well not be, either!”
OM Depot
Nursery Set
PHILADELPHIA, Pa.—A new
nursery for children of members
of the Philadelphia QM Depot
Women’s Club provides a safe, con-
venient place for members to leave
their children while they attend
club meetings and social gather-
ings.
The nursery occupies a room
next to the Women’s Club, and is
well equipped with toys and
junior-sized furniture to keep the
youngsters happily occupied in
constructive activities.
Mrs. Webster Anderson, honor-
ary president and wife of Maj. Gen.
Anderson, depot commander, offi-
cially opened the nursery by cut-
ting the traditional ribbon.
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OCTOBER 19, 1957
84 ARMY TIMES
en oo
THE OPEN MESS
Fort Amador Wives Lend a Hand
PROVIDING school supplies and clothing for children in rural
schools in the Republic of Panama is one of the welfare projects
of the Officers Wives Club at Fort Amador, C.Z. Looking
over some of the donations received at a secent coffee party
are, from left, Mrs. Carroll B. McMath, club president; Mrs.
Milton L. Ogden, honorary vice president; Mrs. Thomas L.
Harrold, honorary president; and Mrs. John D. Mack, welfare
“With a as good and
as plentiful and as
priced as they are now, I'd
some recipes for
My repertoire is to
apple sauce, Waldorf salad
and baked ae a t
some others, tes Mrs.
stationed at Bort Jackson S.C,
Here’s a recipe we found in a
cookbook compiled by the Officers
Wives Club at Fort Meade, Md.
Kt was contributed by Mrs, Peter
B. Kenyon.
APPLE DESSERT
6 apples
1 cup sugar
cinnamon
lemon juice
2 tablespoons butter
2 eggs
1 cup flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon vanilla
Slice apples to cover bottom of
large pie plate; cover with sugar,
cinnamon and lemon juice.
Cream together butter and su-
gar. Add eggs, one at a time, beat-
ing until fluffy. Add flour, baking
powder and vanilla.
Pour mixture over apples. Bake
for 30 minutes in 350 degree oven.
Then increase temperature to 400
degrees for 15 minutes. Serve
with ice cream or whipped cream.
Cooked apples combined with
Polk Wives Meet
It's Time to Cook With 4
Each week an
Name and address should be
dress to: Army Times Kitchen, 20
No recipes can be returned.
an Army wife wins a check for $5.
please mention where the recipe you su
1% cups cooked or canned pumpkin % teaspoon nutmeg
% cup sugar 1% cups milk
% teaspoon salt 16 ounce can (% cup) evapo~
% teaspoon ginger rated milk
1 teaspoon cinnamon 3 egg yolks, beaten 4
; rt ee
1 9 inch unbaked shell
bmit was discovered.
ted clearly on each ae
M St., N. —— 5 a ae
cottage cheese make a delicious
luncheon salad.
APPLE RING SALAD
2 red cooking apples
% cup sugar
% cup water
1 cup cottage cheese
Slice apples crosswise in %%-inch
slices. Cut out cores. Simmer ap-
ple rings in boiling water for two
minutes.
gar and bring to a boil. Remove
apple rings from boiling water and
Arrange crisp Tettuce on salad
plates. Place one apple ring on
lettuce on each plate. Top with
cottage cheese and additional ap-
ple ring. Makes four servings.
Meanwhile combine su-|
Stewart Shop
Needs Goods
FORT STEWART, Ga. —
Mrs. Raymond J. Kennedy,
chairman.
HAMILTON—PETTET
FORT RICHARDSON, Alaska—
Miss Nina Catherine Hamilton,
daughter of Mrs. Alice Hamilton
of Boston, Mass., and Lt. Joseph
David Pettet, son of Lt. Col. and
Mrs. Joseph W. Pettet, U.S. Disci-
plinary Barracks, Lompoc, Calif.,
were married in the post chapel
on Sept. 28.
Chaplain (Lt.) James Weaver
officiated at the double ring cere-
mony,
A reception was held at Rich-
ardson’s Officers’ Open Mess fol-
lowing the ceremony.
*
BOWMAN—TAYLOR
FORT HOLABIRD, Md. — Miss
Lari Jane Bowman, daughter of
Col. and Mrs. Alfred C. Bowman,
became the bride of Henry Wil-
lard Taylor Jr., son of Henry Wil-
lard Taylor Sr. of Glendora, Calif.,
Weddings and ‘Engagements
FORT POLK, La.—Wives of offi-
cers of the Ist Armd. Rifle Bn.,
46th Inf., met at the Polk Officers’
Club for their first coffee party
after the summer months. Mrs,
Ann Del Veccho was hostess for
the event.
Mrs. Edawrd G. Farrand, wife of
in a ceremony at the Post Chapel Oe a sae Ie - =
on Oct. 12. guest of honor.
Heenan
HAULUEOUEO CAAA He
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LYRIC BLDG. BIRMINGHAM, ALA.
transfer to boiling syrup.
Cook gently until apples are ten-
der. Remove from syrup. Con-
tinue boiling syrup until thick-
ened. Pour over cooked rings to
glaze. Chill. Syrup may be tinted
president of the thrift shop,
says the shop needs more goods
to sell. It particularly needs
children’s toys, electrical ap-
pliances, baby goods and house-
hold items.
red if desired.
ae
+ <=
__ JAPANESE Fo00s
MAIL ORDERS FILLED PROMPTLY
(INCLUDING A.P.O.)
r
| KATAGIRI & CO., INC. .
1 224 East 59th St. i
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| Please send me your free price list.
Mame... .2.<...ct ceva wae beso
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NEW ARRIVALS
TN ena
vuunneiotuntanstgeasaannentongningsaneesatnePpee0g00 0 Agee
ABERDEEN PG, MD. 40
BOYS: Lt.-Mrse. John JACKSON, MSzt.-
Mrs. James McKNIGHT, SFC-Mrs. Starling
Russell GAVIN,
MI 2/Lt.-Mrs.
GIRLS: MSgt.-Mrs. Johnnie COX, MSst.-
PORTER, MSsgt.-Mrs. ‘William
FT. BELVOIR, VA
Maj.-Mrs. Kenneth HOFFMANN,
James NICHOLSON, 2/Lt.-Mrs.
Henry NEWELL,
5 ENYON, SFC-Mrs.
Thomas KUYKENDALL.
GIRLS: Capt.-Mrs. William KAULA, Lt.-
Mrs. Lewis WILLIAMS, SP2-Mrs. Donald
RILEY, MSgt.-Mrs. JACKSON, MSget.-Mre.
Ben » Maj.-Mrs. err McDONALD,
Maj.-Mrs. Paul MILLER,
BEATTIE, SFC-
sane ane
r)
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Mrs. Hansel
JOHNSON.
COOKE AMC,
TEx.
TWIN BOY & GIRL: Capt. -Mrs.
me S "Capt. -Mrs. Sterling MUTZ, Lt. Col.-
Mrs. HORLOCK, 2/Lt. -Mrs. Marry
EDINGER, Capt.-Mrs. John LYONS,
STANFORD.
GIRLS: SP2-Mrs. James PACT, CWO-Mrs.
Richard RSETT, Capt.-Mrs. Enrique
MENDEZ, Jr., SP2-Mrs. Mariano CASIL-
LAS, Lt. Col.-Mrs. Donald MYERS, Maj.-
LLY, Capt.-Mrs. Theodore
Pua PENROD, SFC-Mrs.
Robert
BRYAN AFB, TEX.
GIRL: SP2-Mrs. Florentino RIOS.
FT. BUCKNER, OKINAWA
BOYS: SP2-Mrs. Lawrence . WILTSEY,
Capt.-Mrs. Alexander HALLS, Sgt.-Mrs.
Edward VANIER, Capt.-Mrs. Irwin
MAN, arg William GOODMAN, Sgt.-
Mrs. Donald BENNETT.
GIRLS: . Lawrence CONNOR,
SFC-Mrs. Billy "ELTON, Lt. Col.-Mre. Arno
-Mrs. Thomas RHUBOTTOM,
Maj. -Mrs. Wilton LEE, Lt. Col.-Mrs. John
PATCHIN, SFC-Mrs. Micheel KOLOSKI,
SFC-Mrs. Rupert POPE, SFC-Mrs.
SFC-Mrs. Arthur DAVISON,
James
CARLISLE BARRACKS, PA.
TRL: Sgt.-Mrs. Car! HEINTZLEMAN.
iT CARSON, COLO.
: SP2-Mrs. Richard McGINNIS,
SFC-Mrs. beens STUMP, Set.-Mrs. Willie
wy og C-Mrs, John WIBO
Sgt.-Mrs. Merle MERRILL, Lt.-
Ms. Th ‘Thomas WHITSEL, Sgt.-Mrs. Charlies
SPC-Mrs. Jose CARDONA, MSgt.-
NEILSON,
Mrs, Lloya GLASSER.
CAMP DARBY, ITALY
BOY: Sgt.-Mrs. Edward KENNEDY.
A FT. DIX, MN. J.
BOYS: SFC-Mrs. William McPHEE, Maj.-
Mrs, Anrew BEVERIDGE, Sgt.-Mrs. Henry
CONNORS, Sgt.-
Mrs, Sgt.-Mrs. Henry
wen Mrs. —— REIDENBACH,
SFC. s. Avis COOK
GIRLS: Sgt.-Mrs. Sack CROUSE, Sgt.-Mrs.
pe BLANTZ, SFC-Mrs Herman
NSKI, Lt.-Mrs. John RALPH, 2/Lt.-
Mrs. Howard KELLER, MSgt.-Mrs. Thomas
ATKINS, IIl.
CAMP DREW, JAPAN
BOY: CWO-Mrs. Loren DOW.
ELLSWORTH AFB, S$. DAK.
BOY: SPi-Mrs. Loyd HILL.
FT. EUSTIS, VA.
BOYS: Capt.-Mrs. John WELSH, SP2-Mrs.
George ar gy Sgt.-Mrs. Robert ED-
LER, Mrs. J. B. HEWETT.
GIRLS: Sat. -Mrs. Alfred STEVENS, Lt.-
Mra, A. C. Mg st WO-Mrs. Carl BUNT-
ER, SFC-M Thomas hs
FAIRCHILD AFB, W
Le AH, CALIF
BOYS: SFO Mes William MARTIN, Capt.-
Mrs, Paul HUMMELL, SFC-Mrs. Billy COLE,
SP2-Mre. Huey BOLTON, SFC-Mre. Law-
SFC-Mrs. Warren a
Sgt.-Mrs. Jemes BRENNAN, Jr., Sgt.-Mre
Osear HANiY, SP2-Mrs. Manuel ORDONEZ,
Robert BLACK, SFC-Mrs. Thomas
GREEN.
GIRL&: SFc- so i
Mrs. Alan CAMERON wisgi-Mre Ferd.
Mrs. | Mrs. Clarence
FRIED- | 4
Mre. Edward BARKER, Lt. Col.-Mrs.
Thomas —_— IGAN, Set.-Mrs. Billie
HESTILO
ph ea AFB,
2/Lt..Mrs. George FARRELL,
Johnie MITCH FLL, Col.-Mrs.
Edward NICHOLS, Jr., Lt. = — Robert
GOTCHEY, Lt. Col. “Mrs. oe CART-
WRIGHT, Maj.-Mrs. ‘Thomas ARRON
SFC-Mrs. James FOY, Col.-Mrs. Richard
WHITE, M -Mrs. John WOOD, Lt.-Mrs.
Charies D EY, Sr., Maj.-Mrs. Richard
BRYAN, Maj.-Mrs. John HUNEYCUTT,
GIRLS: Set. "os were PEARSON,
ALA.
BOYS:
MSgt.-Mrs.
. Chai
am BUSSELLS, wiugt Mra re. es BUSH,
Maj.Mrs. James -Mrs.
Thomas a Maj. -Mrs.
T. MeCLELLAN,
BOY: aps ure Robert ADA
SFC-Mrs.
Albert PENNINGTON, MSat. ‘an, Stanley
hs se -Mrs. William > ‘eeu
MONMOUTH, N.
BOYS: tet. -Mrs. Earl SOHNS. * SFC-Mrs.
Ralph LONGOBARDO, SP2-Mrs
8 ~« SFC-Mrs. James COOK.
GIRLS: Sgt.-Mrs. Edward CARPENTER,
‘C-Mrs. Joseph BERNADINO,
Charlies RHODUS, 2/Lt.-Mrs.
MAN, Sgt.-Mrs. Benito BASCO, Capt.-Mra.
Wallace SHIREY, 2/Lt.-Mrs. Lioyd SHIP-
PEY, Jr.
NORTON AFG, CALIF.
BOYS: may Joe DAVIDSON,
RILEY, KANS
Sgt-Mrs. William BLACK, &r.,
BOYS: MSgt.-Mrs. Richard WILLIAMS,
SFC-Mrs. —_. BYERLEY.
cae OKLA.
BOYS src. Mrs. Fredrick RAGAIN,
SFC-Mrs. Rolland | MANNING, Mrs.
Edison WATKINS, Lt.-Mrs. F
MONE, Lt-Mrs. Robert LOWR ie
Cramer WILLIAMS, SP2-Mrs.
TSLEEV
SHOR
GIRLS: SFC rs. Arthur BAKER, SFC-
Mrs. Lee LEWIS; Lt.-Mrs. Ross MORRISON,
Sgt.-Mrs. Elbert TILLMAN. Lt.-Mrs. Cas-
per TRIGG, Lt.- John OBERMIRE,
SFC-Mrs. Armando MORALES.
TUNKER AFB, OKLA.
BOY: SFC-Mrs. Margaret ~ or oem,
VALLEY FORGE AH,
BOYS: SP2-Mrs. Robert TAMEEY, sP2-
Mrs. James PHILLIPS.
omey HOFF,
GIRLS; Capt.-Mrs.
FT. ‘
BOYS: SP2-Mrs. mas YOUNG, Sgt.-
'. 2/Lt-Mrs.
DER Fred-
= HROED-
ar.,
» Sat.-Mrs.
se WIL-
IN.
GIRLS:
SFC-Mrs. Richard "McGINNI
Juan HERNANDEZ, Sgt.-Mrs
LINGS, Sgt.-Mrs. Billy EDMI
Cocktail-Buffet Given
BALLOT BOX
FORT MYER, Va.—Mrs. Dorothy
Gill has been installed for her
second term as
ent of the
Mrs. Gill for a
period of six
months will be:
Mrs. Sarah
Walker, vice
president; Mrs.
Martha angen
Mrs. Gill
Mary asda, social secretary,
Elected as chairmen were:
June Williams, entertainment;
Nan Barret, refreshments, Doris
Hines, publicity.
FORT LEAVENWORTH, Kans.
scare gene E. , Weed is the new-
. ly elected presi-
dent of the Fort
L eavenworth
chapter -of the
Daughters of the
U.S. Army.
Serving with
Mrs. Wood for
the coming term
of office will be:
Mrs. John H.
Cushman, vice
president; Mrs.
John K. Walker,
secretary; and
Mrs. Wood
Mrs. George R. Allin, treasurer.
FORT RICHARDSON, Alaska.—
; | At an organizational meeting held
OCTOBER 19, 1957
ARMY TIMES 85
by the ladies ef the Ist Battle
Group, 23d Inf. Regt., the follow-
ing officers were elected to serve
fora period of six months:
Mrs. Ernest H. Wallace, activi-
ties committee; Mrs. C. R. Andreas
Itl, decorations; Mrs. J. L. Curray,
welcoming; and Mrs. Louis J. North,
publicity.
COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo. —
Mrs. Hampton J. Godfrey has been
elected to serve en
as. president of
the Army
Defense Com-
mand Officers
Wives Group at
Ent AFB.
Serving with 3
Mrs. Godfrey
will be Mrs. J, ?
R. Loome, as
secretary - treas- |
urer. Mrs. §. R. 3
Mickelsen, wife
of Lt. Gen. Mick-
Mrs. Godfrey
elsen, is honorary chairman of the
group.
FORT BENNING, Ga. — Mrs.
Charles Ernest was elected presi-
dent of the Lawson Army Air Field
Command Officers Wives Group at
a coffee gathering held at Benning.
Other new officers of the organ-
ization are Mrs. Paul East, vice
president; Mrs. Robert Sauers, sec-
retary-treasurer; and Mrs. Lawrence
Corser, reporter.
FORT STEWART, Ga. — The
Fort Stewart Gray Ladies Chapter
installed Mrs. McPherson Le-
Gill Starts 2d Term at Fort Myer;
Leavenworth Club Elects Wood
Moyne as chairman to succeed Mrs.
Lewis G. Rountree, who is leaving
Stewart soon.
Mrs. LeMoyne was installed dur-
ing a chapter meeting held in the
Gray Lady Room of Stewart’s hos-
pital.
NEW ORLEANS, La. — Mrs.
Thomas A. Livingston, wife of Lt.
Col. Livingston, executive officer,
Camp Leroy Johnson, has resigned
as president of
the Officers@
Wives Club. Col. *
Livingston has j
been reassigned. {
Mrs. Walter D. @
Swank, former §
vice president of
the group, will
now serve as its
president.
Mrs. Norman §
H. Vissering,
whose husband is
Maj. Gen. Visser-
Mrs. Swank
ing, CG, Transportation Terminal
Command, Gulf, is honorary presi-
deht of the club.
FORT MEADE, Md.—The 2d
Region, Army Air Defense Com-
mand officers wives have named
the following slate of officers to
serve their club for the coming
year:
Mrs. R. O. Rank, president; Mrs
George M. Sutton, vice president;
Mrs. E. L. Valenstein, secretary;
Mrs. J. F. Roby, treasurer; Mrs. R
L. Stelzner, program chairman;
and Mrs. T. A. Dorrough Jr., r b-
licity chairman.
Pa
eo.’
ee
STUCK
AT THE
STATION=
.
\
or
=I
*
tt
Wey
we
a
ALASKA AIRLINES
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WASHINGTON — The Chemical
-| Corps Wives Club held a cocktail-
buffet party at Fort McNair. Hos-
tesses were Mrs. Edwin G. Pike
and Mrs, Gordon L. Bushey.
Other social events on the elub’s |
calendar included a dessert bridge |
which was held at the home of |
Mrs. Edgar R. McDaniel and
+ 1a luncheon meeting scheduled for
Oct. 29 at Fort McNair.
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86 ARMY TIMES
OCTOBER 19, 1957
HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY .
FASHION
Shirred & Tiered]
BACK INTEREST and a two-length skirt mark this striking
evening gown, one of the new Italian fashions shown in Florence.
It is in pale blue silk with a floor-length back of widening ruffles.
The short skirted dress is shirred in tiered effect; marked by self
bands with bows in front.
Round Up Time
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3 all the rage this season with Circulation Department—2020 M Street N. W.—Washington 6, D.C.
: Please enter my subscription to ARMY TIMES for:
the well dressed young man. Make :
it two-tone or monotone; embroid- | year @ $6.50
ery is optional awe potas rae ig $2 per eer for eatoeh
i tion— i
Me. 14888 fe ta peck alee $4 . awaiian ition $3 per year for Air Mail postage.
144%, 15, 15%, 16 inches. For size ome and Ronk/Rate
i4% you'll need three yards of ee A
35-inch; yoke, % yard of contrast.
For this pattern send 35¢ in
coins to Iris Lane, Army Times, van sop mene
Box 438, Midtown Station, New [) Bill me C) Payment Enclosed
York 18, N.Y
General Opens
Style Show
By LYDIA LANE
HOLLYWOOD —“I love slinky
clothes, but unfortunately I’m not
the type,” Jean Simmons told me
between scenes of her new pic-
ture at MGM. “Everything has to
be designed simply for me. I look
ridiculous in anything too ex-
treme.”
She looked so pretty in a coral
cocktail dress that I told her so.
Then I asked,
“What type are
you?”
“I’m afraid
I’m stuck with
the ‘jeune fille’
(little girl)
type, At least
that is what
Jimmy tells me.
(her husband,
Stewart Gran-
ger’s, real name
is James Stew-
art), and he has
very. good taste. I’m soe- be-
cause he goes shopping with me
and keeps me from making mis-
takes.
“For me, elothes have to be in
one piece, so that the eye travels
an unbroken line.
“A dress that is well-fitted with-
out a belt is much more becoming
to me. I’ve tried colored belts,
but they cut me in half unless I
have on a very full skirt.
“The length of my dresses makes
a difference, too,” Jean continued.
“I wear all my skirts 14 inches
from the floor. In heels, this hits
me about the middle of the calf.
There is talk every season about
hemlines going up or down, but
I never change mine. I think you
Jean Simmons
At McPherson
FORT McPHERSON, Ga.—The
Women’s Club, concluding that 50,-
000 Frenchmen can’t
opened the fall social season with
a show of the latest fashions, a la
mode francaise
More than 200 members of the |
club were on hand for the occasion,
which was opened with a brief
speech by Lt. Gen. Thomas F.
Hickey, Third Army commander.
The show—held in the Officers’
Club—featured 15 models, ill
members of the club, attired in
the latest Paris fashions “adapted
to the American woman’s needs.”
Mrs. J. L. Picchietti, program
chairman, was in charge of the
fashion show.
Gen. Hickey, addressing the
group, called the Women’s Club
“an integral and important part
of the post and garrison com-
munity.”
be wrong, |
have to take a stand with fashion
| and choose from it what fits your
| type.
| “f adore jewelry,” Jean ex-
| claimed, “but I have to be so care-
| ful. If | wear earrings, I can’t wear
a necklace. I have to keep this
; simple, too. I'd love to wear rows
of bracelets, but I look best in only
one piece at a time.
“Accessories, when
they are
|Club Presents Play
| FORT BELVOIR, Va.— “Never
Too Old,” a one-act play directed
sented at a tea given by the Offi-
cers’ Wives Club this week.
In the receiving line to greet
members were:
Mrs. D. H. Tulley, wife of Bél-
voir’s CG, and honorary president
of the club;. Mrs. R, G, MacDon-
nell, wife of the assistant com-
mandant of the Engineer School;
Mrs. Frank Milner, president .o
the club; and Mrs: S. M. Harlan
Mrs.‘ A. E. Lomax.and Mrs. J, B.
Gray, club officers.
Subscribe to
ARMY TIMES
and save $3.90 a year!
Subscribe, and get ARMY TIMES delivered to you every week. You pay
8c less than the single copy price. Just fill out and return the coupon below
—today.
2 years @ $12.00*
cee nepenersenessensons
by Mrs. H. M. DeNault, was pre-|f
wrong, can take away from your
appearance, I’m wearing brimmed
hats in this picture and love them.
Rex (the designer) made them for
me, and they really fit.”
. We chatted about Jean's little
girl, Tracy. “I weighed less after
she was born than I ever had.
My doctor was very strict about
my diet. I had an easy time, and
getting my figure back was no
problem.”
“Didn’t you exercise?” I ques-
tioned.
“Very conscientiously,” she ad-
mitted, “I worked every day on
the routines he gave me. They
help to tone your muscles and get
everything back into place. They’re
quite necessary. I’m a great one
for not doing today what can be
done tomorrow, but I didn’t pro-
Fashion Doesn't Dictate to Jean:
Her Hem Is 14 Inches from Floor
HERE’S NEW BEAUTY BOOK
“It's the biggest beauty bargain
of the year!” That’s what you'll
say when you receive Lydia Lane’s
brand-new 12-page booklet called
“Discover Your Type.” Informa-
tion on every phase of beauty is
included. Jean Simmons, one of
-addressed,
‘stamped envelope to Lydia Lane
Army Times, P.O, Box 1111, Los
Angeles 53, Calif. Please use U.S.
postage only.
Copyright 1957, Mirror Enter-
crastinate here.”
prises Co., Los Angeles, Calif.
Hood Wives
See Fashions,
Get Tips on Dress Lengths
FORT HOOD, Tex.—The Officers
Wives Club held a luncheon and
fall fashion show for which the
ladies of the 53d Signal Bn. con-
cocted a decorative scheme with
imagination and artistry.
The head table carried a replica
of a micro-wave tower, reminiscent
of King Cole and Sledgehammer
maneuvers. It was built by Lt. B.
T. Nichols and men of Hq. Co. of
the 53d.
Following the luncheon Mrs.
Marion M. Brown, club president,
welcomed the members and their
guests.
Commentary for the show was
handled by Tom Bailey, represen-
tative of. the shop that supplied
the clothing. He gave the ladies
a bit of provocative advice when
he told them to “choose your own
length of dress, depending on the
occasion, time and. what is most
becoming to you.”
Among the models. were Mrs.
H. O. Kitterman, Mrs. O. H. Rich-
ardson, Capt. Mamie L. Head, Mrs.
Eugene C. Orth, Mrs. M. O. Del-
mas, Mrs. W. H. Taylor, Mrs. J. N.
Beasley and Mrs, C, E. Undercof-
er.
Mrs. Thomas Dooley was pro-
gram chairman for this event, and
Mrs. Jackson Lawrence was in
charge of models.
The show’s committee included
Mrs. Howard G. Annas, Mrs.
Gray, Mrs. Arthur B. McLain, Mrs.
James A. Brodrick, Mrs. John 8.
Cross, Mrs. Otto J: Hierholzer, Mrs.
Wendell L. Mahoney, Mrs. Byron
D. Nichols, Mrs: Joseph C. Scar-
borough, Mrs. Westley L. Taylor,
Mrs. Aubrey R. Crews, Mrs. Allan
R. Heimer, Mrs. Durward B. Jen-
kins, Mrs. Donald Murphy and Mrs.
Donald Cliborn, :
Sgt. Nelson Galarneau of Divi-
jsion Trains, supplied the back-
ground music on the organ.
RIDGE MaNo?
Alweys @ breeze
‘neath the shel-
tering oaks and
pines.
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Lain, Mrs.
. John §,
pizer, Mrs.
L. Taylor,
irs. Allan
‘d B. Jen-
y and Mrs,
1 of Divi-
the back-
rgan,
+ home la
of
per! trench,
le, 1952. a father, Ben-
jamin J A ;
‘ Commendation Ribbon
ANAGNOST, SFC John E., as asst. instrue-
and supply sergeant, ROTC Det.,
. of Mo. Now assigned 36th FA Bn.
ANTRI Capt.» Ralph C. Jr., as 8-3, 3d
Bn., 1 Inf. . -Gater ist Amphibi-
ous Bn.) April to July 1957.
AVON, Capt. Robert, as PIO, SETAF, Jan.
to Apr. 1957. Now assigned to the
Sch:, Fort Benning.
CALENDER, Capt. Allie D., Jr., as QIC,
H-21 helicopter transition flight training
course, mp Drew, Japan. Now assign:
as aircraft maintenance officer, trans.
div., Hg. US Army, Japan.
DAVIS, Lt. Col. Wiley B., as chief of the
ese traffic v., Brooklyn Army
‘erminal, Apr. 1954 to July 1957.
FILES, Maj. Vernon, in successive positions
-— at Fort Jackson between 1955 and
HARLAND, Capt. James M.,
field maintenance officer,
Sept. 1956 to Aug. 1957. Now assigned
transportation officers advanced class,
Fort Eustis.
HILMAR, Capt. James E., for serv'ce with
KMAG, July 1956 to Sept. 1957. Sched-
uled for assignment to Zi.
KLINE, SFC William L., as instructor,
arty. sec,, 4th Div., German trng. 2ss'st-
ance gp., Jan. te June 1557. Now as-
signed 14th Armd Cav. Regt., APO 171.
&cCRUM, Lt. Col. Ralph C., as Army mem-
ber, Joint Military Transportation Bd.,
Far East. Now serving as chief, Mili-
tary District, New Jersey.
MOFFITT, SFC Thomas H., for service as a
member of AAA Bn., Castle AFB.
Now assigned Hq. Biry., 436th AAA
Missile Bn., Travis AFB, Calif. --
APG Gets Honor
For Cancer Fund Aid
ABERDEEN PROVING
GROUND; Md.—A_ Certificate of
‘lerit from thé American Cancer
society was presented recently to
Yiaj. Gen, Carroll H. Deitrick, CG
oi Aberdeen Proving Ground.
In accepting the certificate on
»ehalf of the Proving Ground, Gen,
“sitrick expressed appreciation of
a | military and-eivilian personnel
‘v.20 contributed’ to the Cancer
society during last year’s “APG
soint charities fund appeal.
ORDERS
(Continued from Page 16)
CWO3 Ivan D. Toad, AGC, upon own
2
as aircraft
Fort Riley,
cwo-3 Edwin D. Livermore, Arty, upon
own appl.
CWO-2 James C? Yarborough, AGC, upon
wn appl.
eo John P. Schlafly, SigC, upon own
opi.
€WO-2 Joseph N. Cimino, CmiC, upon
own appl.
* fO-2 Julius F. Heider, TC, upon own
op
* 40-2 Loyd E. Maddox, MPC.
Sgt Jesse E. Snow.
Sgt Norman H. Adams.
Set Leroy G. Hinze.
Set Marshall E. Taylor.
» ‘gt Kenneth C. Calvert.
Sgt James D. Jemison.
‘gt William A. Lyming.
Sgt Harry P. Christian.
Sgt Philip P. Moore.
Sgt Wayland T. Wilborn.
Sgt Robert A. cagse.
. Maple.
~» Campbell.
Sgt Charles K. Jackson.
Robert Session.
Paul J. Stone.
Kenneth K. K. McBroom.
omas K. Carroll.
John D. Cook.
John A. Anderson.
John B. Upchurch,
Earl Ballard.
Ronald G. Teriney.
William E. Glenney.
P2 Mike Leoczko.
SP2 Everett 8. Veal.
SP2 William E. Nations.
Sgt August A. W. Weber.
BRE’ QQQNQGGGQnan
“All in favor of abolishing Friday.
say ‘ Aye’—”
Fort Carson C/S
FORT ; CARSON, Colo. — Col.
John M. Finn, former military ad-
viser to the Vietnamese Secretary
of Defense, replaces Col. Paul T.
Snowden as-chief of staff for Fort
Carson and the 9th Div.
OCTOBER 19, 1957
ARMY TIMES 87
WASHINGT O N—Retirement
point ¢redits‘may be earned by Re-
serve officers of the military medi-
cal services who attend sessions of
the 64th annual convention of the
Association of Military Surgeons
of the United States to be held in
Washington, D.C., Oct. 28-30, the
Department of Defense has an-
nounced. S
Official orders will not be needed
by reservists.to attend the conven-
tion, Instead, each service will
maintain a desk at convention
headquarters in the Hotel Statler,
where reservists will present their
credentials and register for the
meetings they attend.
Reserves May Earn Points
At Surgeons’
Convention
More than 1500 delegates from
the United States, Canada, Mexico,
the United Kingdom, Germany,
Norway, Sweden, Greece, Japan,
Cambodia, and several Latin Amer-
ican countries will take part in the
association’s extensive program, ac-
cording to Col. Amos R. Koontz,
Maryland National Guard; Balti-
more, president, The foreign dele-
gates will be taken on a special
tour of the large military exhibit
at Fort Myer, Va., staged in con-
nection with the Annual Meeting
of the Association of the U.S.
Army, which will also be held in
Washington, Oct, 28-30. ,
'
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P.O. Box 1436 * Louisville 1, Kentucky
38 ARMY TIMES
OCTOBER 19, 1957
Letters to the Editor — f
:
(Continued from Page 8)
organization, nine-tenths of its
workers volunteers, each one of
whom is human end not immune to
making mistakes.
I have been a voiunteer with the
Red Cross, Home Service Depart-
ment, for almost 15 years. I and
the dozen other Home Service vol-
unteers, as well as the professional
staff in this small city, strongly
feel our responsibility to the serv-
iceman and his family and strive to
be of real service to them. I be-
lieve this attitude prevails through-
out the organization. I dare not
say that no one of us has ever done
‘a wrong thing.
The lieulenant forgets the other
services the Red Cross provides;
disaster relief, the blood program,
training courses — such as mcther
and baby care, which his wife may
have taken advantage of — swim-
ming instruction, and many others.
The Gray Ladies and nurses aides
in the miliiary hospitals give de-
voted and unfailing help.
Let the lieutenant ask himself if
the armed forces would faré better
without the help of the Red Cross.
“ARMY WIFE”
.
~
Thinks RIF’ed Should
Have Tried Harder
CHICAGO: I would like to com-
ment upon the recent order releas-
ing a number of reserve officers
from active service, and especially
upon the three letters appearing in
the 18 September issue under the
heading of “ ‘Sub-Standard’ Brand
Stigmatized Officers.”
First of all, I would certainly
have to agree that there is no real
need to brand these officers as
“sub-standard.” No logical per-
son can deny the important con-
tribution of the many thousands of
Reserve Officers to our military
establishments dtid country.
However, it seems to me that all
three officers writing you in that
issue have missed the point at hand
by blaming the Regular officer sys-
tem
To me, the attitude should be one
of realizing the problem, and at-
tempting to be in the higher group
of Reserve officers so that they will
me retained to supplement the Reg-
ular corps. It can be done because
it is being done by thousands of
Reserve officers.
To bring the Regular officer sit-
uation into the picture does noth-
ing more than make the
wonder if he should start
ing himself against this
his future. Though “tenure
tion” for the Regular mi
open to some question by u
ed individuals, it is one of
benefits given to the Re for
his devotion to service and his will-
ingness to sacrifice some of the ad-
vantages which accrue to his Re-
serve officer brothers.
It must be remembered that the
Regular officer is suffering some
disadvantages that the Reserve of-
ficer is not. The Reservist must
take some of the unpleasant facts
in his status as does the Regular.
Civilian companies have regular,
or trainee, programs because they
realize the advantage of having
men dedicated to their firms. The
Regular, whether enlisted or com-
missioned, has indicated a desire
to stay with the military service;
the Reserve officer has given a
“maybe” or “I will stay IF...”
The Regular gets no severance
pay when he is released for cause.
Does the Reserve officer want to
take this disadvantage along with
the Regular?
All Reserve officers were ac-
cepted as such with the under-
standing that they would be used
to supplement the Regular corps as
long as they were needed. Now,
we are forced to cut back and the
supplement is no longer needed to
the same extent.
I think the point of question in
this matter is, “Of the many fine
Reserve officers we have to sup-
plement the Regular corps, we can
only keep a certain number. There-
fore, we must take that number
from the top of those ayailable.”
NAME WITHHELD
v *
ae
t to
itec-
be
the
BE
Sat:
4
Letting Low-IQs
Go Is No Answer
FORT BENNING, Ga.: I don’t
think that weeding out the men
with the low IQs is going to ease
the problem confronting our gov-
ernment today...
I think that after a man has
had a certain amount of basic train-
ing he would be of the same value
to his government, the Army and
his family if he were to be placed
in a Reserve unit in or near his
home town. If he were ever called
upon to face an emergency, I know
the results would bé good.
By doing this, it would not only
‘Cuff Stvles Don't
FORT ORD, Calif—In your last September issue you ‘published
a photo of a pair of handcuffs allegedly dating back to the Revolu-
Could be that the Hessians brought them over from
tionary War.
Germany and, as Germans seldom
wears, it could be that they still make them.
As you can see (photo above), my set is the same, when com-
pared te photo of others in your
dated 1943 JG.
tween 1776 and 1943.
I got my set in Germany and know that some of
the Kripo still use and carry them, Anyhow, it’s a long time be-
Chanae
change anything that works and
paper, but mine are stamped or
nt doen budget, but would
Soe vor dita db raaptae te tae
armed forces... Ve .
’ Pvt. KEITH E. KLINE
FoRr BLISS, Tex.: ‘The follow
ng on might contribute
a Be og phase of the reduction
program:
For all officers and enlisted men
who are now on active duty for six
months, have the six months re-
duced to four. By doing so, the of-
ficers would return to their respec-
training of Reservists . . ;
As it Is now, officers on duty for
months in p and troop
duty. It would be to the better-
ment of the Army to allow
who are qualified to train recruits
to continue doing so. At the same
time, give the six-month o a
chance to use those two months in
a much more effective way.
The six-month enlisted men will
profit just as much with a tour of
duty of four months.
“OMINOUS”
FORT POLK, La.: Releasing all
EM who score less than 90 on three
of their ACB tests is probably a
good system and may improve the
Army in time. But why don’t they
require the Civil Service person-
nel to take a similar test? They
do the same jobs as EM in ‘a num-
ber of instances ahd often along-
a the same men being discharg-
ed.
These people hang on through
their trial periods, and then go
from bad to worse. When their in-
efficiency is mentioned, the super-
visor will tell you it is too-late to
do anything about it and it is next
to impossible to fire one. Some of
them stay on and deadbeat the tax-
payer for years because they have
good Joes for supervisors.
It would be amazing the amount
of money the taxpayer would save
if these people were given a stand-
ard test by the Army. Then they
couldn’t use their political pull or
some relative to get these jobs for
them.
Doubts That Wilson
Wants Armed Forces
FORT RILEY, Kan.: I wish to
thank the honorable Mr. Wilson
for his consideration in advising
against a separate ration increase.
With income tax on the service-
man’s pay and the recent levy on
pay in the form of Social Security,
plus the fact that each month food
prices have shown a sharp increase,
I believe Mr. Wilson made the
right decision.
Besides getting out the so-called
low I1Q-men by legal means, the
‘educated smart men soon perceive
that
wants no armed forces at all.
Actually, with all the foreign aid
this country finances, we really do
not need an armed force as we
could call upon one of our friendly
allies to support and protect us
against an aggressor.
On the other hand, anyone can
see that even a 10-cent increase
in ration money would pay one-
half of the money lost by the So-
cial Security deductions.
NAME WITHHELD
~ *
NAME WITHHELD
. a
.
Texas Chalks Up
Another Mark
PACIFIC AREA; I heard that
early in 1957 the state of Texas
passed a Korean bonus law. If
this is right, would you send the
necessary information as to whom
I should write and what else I
would need to qualify for same.
~ eee ee
- =<.
Nal ene yt a net fae nat ta Nt eam
“ ¢
tive Reserve units and help in the
six months spend at least two|
the Secretary of Defense}
= —~s-- a ene
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WEEKLY FOOT BALL REPORT
Carson Remains Unbeaten,
Brooke and Lee Also Win
GTATESIDE Army football
action last weekend cen-
Fort Bliss, an exciting game be
tween Fort Sill and Fort Carson,
and an interesting inter-service
game in the East,
The Eourth Army contest found
the Brooke Comets winning con-
vincingly, 29-13, over Fort Bliss,
and the surprising Fort Carson
Mountainéers defehted Fort Sill
20-13.
Meanwhile, the highly-rated Boll-
ing AFB, Generals, one of the na-
tion’s finest service elevens, found
the Fort Belvoir Engineers no easy
club to-whip. Bolling won the
fame 21-12 but the all-star Air
Force team, loaded with pros and
college stars, had to go all out to
remain in the unbeaten ranks. The
Bolling-Bélvoir scrap was wit-
nessed by a crowd of 9000 fans at
Belvoir.
Fort Dix, one of the strongest
Army teams, was idle last weekend
when a flu epidemic hit the Nor-
folk Navy Tars and the game had
to be cancelled.
Bolling Defeats
Belvoir, 21-12
FORT BELVOIR, Va.—The un-
derdog Belvoir Engineers rallied
in the second half but three second
period touchdowns gave Bolling
AFB a 21-12 victory here last Sat-
urday. Bolling had been favored
to win the game by 20 points.
Frank Tamburello, former Mary-
land quarterback, was the big gun
in the Army team’s attack. He
scored both Belvoir TDs on one-
yard plunges and completed ten of
26 passes good for 87 yards.
Bolling’s first string quarterback,
Ralph Guglielmi of Notre Dame
and the Washington Red Skins, was
out of action with a leg: injury,
but John Roach (Southern Meth-
odist) and Eddie West (North
Carolina State) filled in well.
Roach scored the first TD from
the one and Very! Switzer (Green
Bay Packers) went over’ from the
three. The second score was set
up when Heap ‘intercepted a Tam-
burello pass, giving the ball to
Bolling on the Belvoir three. A
few minutes later, Bolling scored
again as Heap capped a 65-yard
drive with a 10-yard end sweep.
It was Belvoir’s first defeat af-
ter three straight victories.
Fort Eustis Loses
To Quantico, 27-6
QUANTICO, Va.—Score was 6-6
at halftime, but the Quantico
Marines added three touchdowns
in the second half to whip Fort
Eustis, Va., 27-6 here last Satur-
day.
Eustis tied the score in the sec-
ond quarter when quarterback Lee
Ross intercepted a Quantico pass
on his own 43 and went al] the way
for the touchdown.
Little Creek Navy
Tops Myer, 33-6
FORT MYER, Va.—Myer half-
back Clarence Lamb returned the
opening kickoff 88 yards for a
touchdown, but Myer never scored
again as the unbeaten Little Creek
SPORTS
OCTOBER 19, 1957
ARMY TIMES 39
HOLDING silver trophies that will go to Most Valuable Players
in the service football polls conducted by the Army Times
Publishing Co. are Maj. Gen. George Olmsted, USAR (right)
and Lt. Col. John M. Rodier, USAFR. Gen. Olmsted is presi-
dent of United Services Life Insurance Co., which will present
the trophies to the posts where the MVPs and runner-ups in
the All-Army, All-Air Force and All-Sea Service polls are
stationed. Army Times sponsors the All-Army poll, Air Force
Times the All-AF contest, and Navy Times the All-Sea Service
poll_—Photo by John Neubauer.
GAMES OCT. 11 and Fort Riley, Kans., may be found on
the second spérts page.)
Brooke ...........000000-+. VO: Se Bell pees aedete Gakes oct. 10-00
Fort Bliss ............. © @. 0 13—13 | Lockbourne ars 37 . Maxwell AFB 2
tan Mitchel AFB 6 Post College, N. Y. 13
Maryland “R” 0 6 q 13—26 Eglin AFB 19 Camp Lejeune 14
ane San Diego MCRD 20 Ss. Di State 7
Fort Meade ............ 008 @eO Memphis Navy 20 .. caeaae tan.
a Shaw AFB 27 .... Stewart AFB ©
GAMES OCT. 12 = pone Ae
Fort Carson ............ 6 7.4 0—20 tin yt a. eee ne
Fort “Sill ............... © OB 713) pore Beivere, Vor ot Lime Crock, Ve,
— ; a Neval Amphib Station.
Bolling AFB ........ @ 21° O21) nore cin; ens, OS Biles, Tex.
Fort Belvoir ......... 0 0 6 6—I12|, Fert Monmouth, N. J., at Fort Meade,
_ P Srecke Medical Center, Tex., ef Cisco
r.
Fort Lee ................ 9 7 6 14-30 a Arizone State Frosh at Fert Huachuca,
Fort Monmouth...7 @ @ O6—7 ‘camp Lejeune, N. C., ot Fort Eustis, Va.
— Antilies Hurricanes, P. R., at Fort Stew-
Fort Eustis ............ 0606006 6)% S. ae
Quantico cecscscccceccces 6 0 q 14—27 Fort Carson, a. _ »h aa AFB,
pa Columbus, Ohio.
Little Creek ..... . 4 0 7 19—33
Fort Myer ............6 @ @© @-6} Pin Loops Underway
Fort Stewart .....7 @ @ @—%| CAMP DRAKE, Japan. — The
Charleston AFB... 7 3 0 13—23/ winter bowling leagues are under-
— way in Japan. SP3 Walter Schle-
REGIMENTAL LEAGUES ner rolled the high game on open-
(Scores of the week's league games ati ing night, 234. He also had high
Fort Srope, WM. Cu Fort Compe. “v~ | series, 584. Schlener’s team, H&H
; Co., 100th FA Bn., Hed high
Navy team defeated the Colonials | team series, 2406. eden as
33-6 here last Saturday.
Halfback John Jacobs scored "
three times for Little Creek on| Wins Johnson Golf
passes. Two of these TD tosses ;
were thrown by quarterback John NEW ORLEANS, La-—Lt. Col.
McAneny. Donald E. Connor won the recent
: 1957 Camp Leroy Johnson handi-
(Continued on Next Page) cap golf tournament.
ARMY SCOREBOARD |
:
:
FORA A AAD AAD AAA AAA AAA AAAAAAAS AAI II
ARMY TIMES
AAU- Aermg (957
OFFICIAL BALLOT
Player
ENDS
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CAECRE EERE EEE EEE EEE EOESEEEEESERERSEEEEEOEEOEEH OS OR Ee = ERE E HES EH OEE EEE SHEE EORE®
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GUARDS
SORPOREOREHOR SED E SEED E EEE HEREREREREER ENE RES HERO eseeee = = OH HHH RESON EE HAO BOB OHEr Eee
SEIIENEET <1" | £5 Sica cStheagutisevaeiaroiidetnseehoncpsbaipeiodoriene
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TINIE da! Cacecsduieues suse inden sis belsasestco tigtetacerioens
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FULLBACK
MOST VALUABLE PLAYER
NAME POSITION TEAM
idles Demme saci Se Taare. O68 we ih O 0 here
Voter's Outfit
Voter’s Post
see e Wee eeeeeeeeeeeeevee
RULES
:
:
This is the seventh annual Army Times All-Army football poll, the only
world-wide poll of its kind. No ballot will be counted unless voter's name, out-
fit and post are included. A complete team need not be selected. NO MORE
THAN FOUR PLAYERS FROM ANY ONE ARMY TEAM MAY BE NAMED.
Selections must be made in this ballot except by head football cooches and
sports writers who will receive a special ballot by mail. You may vote for
any player on an Army team although “touch” football or “flag” football
players are ineligible. All ballots must be received by Nov. 26, 1957. Results
of the poll, with a complete tally of the votes, will be announced in the Dec.
7 edition. The 22 players receiving berths on the All-Army squad will re-
ceive engraved Lord Elgin wrist watches from Army Times. Army football's
“most valuable player” will also be selected. Comments on your selections
are welcome, MAIL YOUR BALLOT TO SPORTS EDITOR, ARMY TIMES,
2020 M ST. NW., WASHINGTON 6, D. C.
Trophies Announced
For All-Army Poll
WASHINGTON—Two special new awards have
added to the seventh annual Army Times All-Army
ball poll.
In addition to the previously announced awards for
all members of the 22-man All-Army squad, the two Army
posts where the Most Valuable Player and runnerup are
stationed will receive handsome silver trophies for per-
manent display.
The trophies, which will serve to remind the winning
posts of their All-Army grid stars for years to come, will
be presented by United Services Life Insurance Co., which
insures commissioned officers in-all services.
All first and second team All-Army players receive
21-jewel Lord Elgin wrist watches.
* *
THIS YEAR’S All-Army poll will end on Nov. 26. All
ballots must be received by that date.
Although Army football coaches and sports writers
will again take part in the poll, Army Times readers are
expected to wield the balance of power. Therefore, if you
have seen any players who merit All-Army honors this
season, don’t fail to put their names on the ballot on this
page and forward to Sports Editor, Army Times, 2020 M
St. NW, Washington 6, D. C.
Comments on your selections are welcome.
been
foot-
geles’
e
first annual 6th Region, Army Air | stroke,
Defense Command swimming tour-
n
in the Presidio of San Francisco.
L. A. Outfit Sweeps Swim Meet
FORT BAKER, Calif—Los An-, Kenneth Gengler, each of whom
47th AAA Brigade won|won three events. Huback’s vic-
very event but one to take the|tories came in the 200-yard back
400-yard individual med-
ley and 100-yard backstroke. Geng
ament at Letterman Sports Center | ler led the way in the 100, 200 and
400-yard free-style races.
Hanford’s Antonio Guido was The tournament was the first in
the only man from a team other|the series of sports events con-
than Los Angeles’ to win an event.
He captured first place in the div-
ing competition on the final day
0
ducted on the battalion, group,
brigade and region level by units
of the Army Air Defense Com
f the meet. mand. The program will also de
Leading the 47th Brigade in the| cide regional champions in table
sweep were Clifford Huback and'tennis and golf.
40 ARMY TIMES
OCTOBER 19, 1957
ARMY Weekly a Football Report
THE MOST COMPLETE SUMMARY OF STATESIDE ARMY" FOOTBALL TO BE FOUND IN ANY PUBLICATION
TAAL eR
CU WLLL. a
(Continued from Preceding Page)
Undefeated Carson
Tops Sill, 20-13
FORT SILL, Okla. — The Fort
Carson, Colo., Mountaineers scram-
bled to their third straight victory
of the season Saturday with a 20-13
decision over Fort Sill.
Carson pushed over the winning
touchdown on a one-yard plunge
by fullback Dom Comstock midway
through the third period. The TD
and Bill Fleischman’s conversion
gave Carson a 20-7 lead.
The first Carson score was a 94-
yard kickoff return by halfback
Fleischman. Comstock, former
Alabama star, gave Carson its first
lead, 13-7, on a three-yard plunge
early in the second quarter.
The undefeated -Carson team
meets Lockbourne AFB Oct. 20 in
Columbus, Ohio.
Fort Lee Wallops
Monmouth, 30-7
FORT MONMOUTH, NJ. — A
fine Fort Lee, Va., running attack
spoiled the home opener here last
Saturday as the Travellers downed
Monmouth 30-7.
The win brought Lee’s season
record even at 2-2. It was Mon-
mouth’s third setback of the cam-
paign and 12th consecutive defeat.
Lee’s attack rolled for 326 yards—
237 on the ground—while Mon-
mouth was held to only 11 yards
net rushing.
Brooke Comets Top
Fort Bliss, 29-13
FORT SAM HOUSTON, Tex.—
The Brooke Army Medical Center
Comets whipped the Fort Bliss,
Tex., Falcons, 29-13 in a Fourth
Army Conference game here last
Friday night before 6000 fans.
Brooke scored in the first quar- |
ter on a 63-yard pass play from
quarterback Wes Bair to end Clar-
ence Wessman, The Comets added
two more touchdowns in the sec-
ond period, on a 21-yard screen
pass play from Bair to fullback
Carroll Swanger, and on a one-yard
plunge by Swanger. Final Brooke
TD, in the third period, came on
a short plunge by quarterback Don
Egge, climaxing an 89-yard drive.
The Comets added a safety in the
final quarter when linebacker Jim
Tonkel tackled Bliss fullback Otis
Lincoln in the end zone. Center
John Tatum kicked three extra
points.
Bliss scored twice in the final
period. ,Quarterback Bob St. Pierre
passed to end George Stinson on a
play ‘covering 29 yards, and he also
hit Lincoln with a screen pass good
for 45 yards and the second TD.
Exciting 6-6 Game
In Campbell Loop
FORT CAMPBELL, Ky.—Stor-
ing a last period touchdown, the
506th Abn. Inf. Curahees squeezed
out a 66 tie with the 501st Abn.
Inf. Geronimos in the top game of
the week in the Campbell regimen-
tal league.
A 19-yard pass play from 501st
quarterback Dan Easley to end Ron
Bennett accounted for the Geron-
“imo TD in the third period. Tackle
Ed Yevincey’s conversion attempt
was wide.
The Curahee TD came midway
in the final period after 225-pound
“Tiny”, Tim Delinski fell on a loose
lateral pass tossed by Easley on
the Geronimo nine-yard line. Two
plays later, halfback “Whip” Wil-
son circled left end for the score.
Geronimo halfback Chuck Albin,
backing up the line on the con-
version attempt, crashed through
to block Clayt McFall’s kick to save
the 501st from defeat.
The Geronimos, who were tied
for first place with the 187th Rak-
kasans thus dropped to second
place in the eight-team league.
Their record is now two wins and
a tie. The Curahees are 1-1-1.
In other games, the Post Units
Wreckers dealt the Support Group
Raiders their fourth straight loss,
19-6, on Saturday, and the 187th
Abn. Inf. Rakkasans remained on
top of the heap by trouncing the
327th Abn. Inf. Bulldogs 39-12 on
Sunday.
Stewart Loses 23-7
To Charleston AFB
CHARLESTON, S.C. — Charles-
ton AFB defeated the Fort Stew-
art, Ga., Rockets 23-7 here Satur-
day night.
The two teams battled evenly
for three quarters before Charles-
ton’s superior reserve strength
paid off with two scores in the
fourth period.
A 45-yard Charleston drive, end-
ing with a 20-yard run by Ross
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Pilkington, accounted for a first
quarter touchdown. Stewart
bounced back to Khot the score
as quarterback Joe Criner passed
to end Julius Fedak in the end
zone, climaxing a 65-yard drive.
A field geal gave Charleston a
10-7 halftime lead, and two fourth
quarter scores—one by Pilkington
and one by Dick White—iced the
game for the airmen.
Fort Dix-Norfolk
Game Cancelled
FORT DIX, N.J.—The powerful
Fort Dix Burros were idle last
weekend due to the cancellation of
the game scheduled Sunday at the
Norfolk, Va., Naval Station.
Jack Cloud, former All-American
and coach of the Norfolk Tars, no-
tified Coach Jim Ward of the Bur-
ros that so many of his sailors had
been hit by the flu he would = un-
able to field a team.
College Team Tops
Meade Generals
FORT MEADE, Md.—The Uni-
versity of Maryland’s “B” team
capitalized on Meade “fumbles to
I ERECT OR
day in a game celebrating the 39th
anniversary of Second Army and
the dedication of Meade’s new
“Mullins Field.” Halfback John
Broadway made several long runs
for the Army team but fumbles and
the superior all-around running at-
tack of the visitors was too much
to overcome.
Kaws Win Again
In Riley League
FORT RILEY, Kans.—The Non-
Division Kaws. romped to their
fourth straight one-sided victory in
the Fort Riley regimental level
league and four other favored
teams won last weekend.
The Kaws buried the 2d Inf.
Rams 65-12 to remairf unbeaten,
and the 18th Inf. Vanguards, who
may be the ofily serious threat to
the Kaws in the title race, scored
an easy 39-0 win over the 28th Inf.
Black Lions.
In other games, the 121st Signal
and ist Engrs. team beat ist Di-
vision Trains, 46-0; Divarty downed
4th Cav.—69th Armor, 20-6; and
16th Inf. defeated 26th Inf., 19-7.
Black Panthers Win
Fort Bragg Game —
FORT BRAGG, N.C.—The Black
Panthers of the 1st Abn. Bat. Gp.;
505th Inf., trounced the 325th In-
fantry’s Ist Abn. Bat. Gp., 22-6, Fri-
day night in ong
tory of Hedrick Stadium.
In the second period, Falcon
halfback Fred Smalls took a hand-
off from Fred Casey and raced-41
yards-for the game’s first score.
After recovéring a fumble on
the Faleon 35, the Panthers drove
to the one-foot line where Joe Gil-
more plunged over to tie the game.
With the score still tied 6-6 going
into the fourth quarter, the Pan-
thers suddenly came alive. J
Beaton passed to Walter Wells for
a 4l-yard TD play and Spurgeon’
Jones ran-73 yards for another Pan-
ther score. Jerry St. Catherine
booted an extra point following the
final TD and added three more
points by kicking his ¢irst field
goal of the season.
In other league games, the 504th
Inf. defeated the Bragg Posters
26-0, and Supporting Arms Group
defeated Corps Arty 246,
They choose A.A. $. .
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@ Top Boxing Coach
WITH 24TH DIV. IN KOREA.—
One reason for the 2ist Inf. Regi-|
ment’s string of 16 consecutive
victories in Eighth Army invita-
tional boxing tournaments is the
fine coaching of Lorenzo Davis.
Sgt, Davis boxed professionally
in 1937-38, meeting many rising
stars of the day, including Kid
Checolate who later was light-
weight ehamp.
‘Entering the Army in 1941, the
2ist coach’s boxing career came
to an abrupt halt when he was
wounded in France in 1944. Since
then he has helped many Army
boxers, including some who en-
tered the pro ring after leaving
service.
As for his top rank team this
year, Davis says: ‘The success
of the Gimlet team is due to the
boxers themselves. I can only
show and teach them so much,
the rest is up to them.”
@ Zama Leads Pin Loop
CAMP ZAMA, Japan. — After
the first three weeks of compe-
tition in the Major Inter-Service
Traveling Bowiing League, the
Camp Zama Ramblers hold the
lead against seven other Army,
Navy, Marine and Air Force teams
in the central Japan area.
The Ramblers have eight wins
and one loss with the Yokota Raid-
ers a elose second at 7-2.
SP3 Dan. Manning, of. Zama
claims the high league series with
Buffalo
Star
DICK Foglia
has beena
standout in the
17th Inf. Buf-
falo line this
season. The
hard - charg-
ing guard is
called “one of
the finest line-
men in Korea”
by his coach,
Ist. Lt. Joe
Concilla.
WITH HQ I CORPS IN KOREA.
— The 36th Engineer Group
Beavers are posing a_ serious
threat to all opposition in the
Bullseye-Bayonet basketball league
which will open in the first week
of Nevember. Head coach SP3
Peter Flaminio has been working
with his squad for several weeks
now, and his enly problem seems
to be what to do with all the tal-
ent he has to choose from.
Typical of the team’s depth and
experience is PFC Walter Dzurus,
a 64 forward from Michigan
State. Last year Dzurus played
at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo.
Starting in the center slot will
be Lt. Ron Miller, who is 6-6 and
played three years of college ball
at NYU. The other forward will
be Beaver captain PFC George
Durant who stands 6-5 and played
for Brigham Young.
a 628 on games of 193-220-215.
At guard, coach Flamihio has
Beavers Have Srong Team
Set for Korea Cage Loop
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CWO Leonard Wilson, 6-2 veteran
of Nebraska University and the
Phillips ‘66 Oilers where he team-
ed with such stars as Bus White-
head and Bucky Buchannan.
Flaminio, who plays as well as
eoaches, will probably keep the
other guard position for himself.
| athletic
OCTOBER 19, 1957
ARMY TIMES 41
ACCENTS COMPANY-LEVEL PLAY
New Sports Program
For Alaska in ‘58
FORT RICHARDSON, Alaska.—Army sports in Alaska
has divided into two sports conferences in an effort to en-
courage lower-level competition, command athletic officer
Maj. Rex Hopper announced.
The change, which establishes
Northern and Southern confer-
ences, went into effect this month
but the results of the split are not
expected to be tested until early
1958 during the winter sports sea-
son.
“The main objective,” Maj. Hop-
per said, “is to stimulate sports
competition at the lowest possible
level. We would like to see play
begin amongst platoons and grad-
ually work up to where we can
produce authentic conference
champions in individual and team
sports.
“In short, we are attempting to
give the ordinary Joe a _ better
chance. With two conferences and
continued ‘stress on company-level
play, we feel this can be accom-
plished.”
The 1958 USARAL policy pro-
vides for competition in 15 fields.
These include eight individual, four
company-level, one major unit-
level, and two conference-level
sports.
~ s *
BASKETBALL will be the first
activity affected by the
change. Held on a major unit level
in the past, the hardwood sport
will be reserved for company-level
teams.
One company will continue play
through its league, into the. con-
ference tournament and _ finally
into the USARAL tourney. The
winner and runnerup from each
circuit will compete for ihe
USARAL crown. The practice of
picking post all-star units to play
in Alaska-wide tournaments is out.
The identical slate of events will
hold true with volleyball, softball
and flag football.
Competition in individual sports
will begin at company level and
progress, enabling the top men in
a given sports to meet for the
USARAL title. In this group are
boxing, wrestling, track and field,
swimming and diving, skiing, golf,
tennis and bowling.
The only major _ unit-level
sport, baseball, will be affected
only by a minor stipulation which
limits the maximum troop strength
represented by any team to 2500.
Football and hockey expand
from installation-level to confer-
ence-level competition.
Competition with Air Force
teams will continue in football.
Three civilian aggregations wil]
provide additional hockey oppo
nents.
Matching individual Army
champs against Air Force op
ponents has not been ruled out
Top individuals and teams may
be sent to the States to represent
USARAL in All-Army competi-
tion, providing they meet certain
standards.
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42 ARMY TIMES
OCTOBER 19, 1957
IN RING OR IN BATTLE
MSgt. Lew Jenkins
Tough Man to Beat
FORT ORD, Calif.—“I went back to Korea because I
wanted to be with the men.” That single remark is typical
of MSgt. Lew Jenkins, the former lightweight champion
who ran a PT boat loaded with wounded off the shore at Salerno
back and forth like a streetcar until the hospital ships couldn’t
handle them all, the man who won a silver star for holding a road-
block in Korea for ten days, not with a company but with strag-
glers, because “they were depending on us.”
Born in Texas, Jenkins remembers picking cotton on cold
days when his hands would crack. And he recalls that his first
fight was in an alley. At the age of eight he fought a Mexican
boy for a prize, the prize being a nice fresh pie.
As a teen-ager he fought in carnivals, and then became a club
fighter, sometimes fighting for a five dollar bill.
*
MOST FAMOUS for his right hand, some boxing fans forget
that it was a left hook that dumped Lou Ambers, the 9-1 favorite,
in the second round of their 1940 championship fight. Ambers was
a strong favorite because of his strength and because Lew was
supposed to be a “wild one” who knew nothing about boxing, and
a man who trained on bright lights and a bottie.
In 1950 Jenkins fought Carmen Basilio, curent middleweight
champ. Lew says the match was made to help build a reputation
for Basilio, “knock out an old man,” and get Lew a few bucks.
But after ten rounds, even the folks in Basilio’s home town booed
the decision for Carmen,
At the suggestion that he had managed to stay away from
Basilio, Jenkins replied quietly, “I never stayed away from any
of them. He just couldn’t hit me hard enough to put me down.
I could see the openings but just couldn’t reach through for them.
I used to let the best of them start a left and then beat them in
with a straight right, but no more.”
* o
LEW JENKINS was a fighter of the old school. His right
traveled only inches and never drew back. He can’t understand
fighters today who wave a right hand before shooting it.
His right was so dangerous that many an opponent forgot to
watch for Lew’s left. On the other hand, Lew wasn’t hard to hit.
One time he fought with 13 fresh stitches in his left hand,
another time he fought with a broken neck.
In 1936, Lew began his first hitch with the Army and served
with F Troop, 8th Cav., at Fort Bliss, Tex. When he got out in
1939, he headed west looking for fights. In less than two years he
was lightweight champ.
Today, he’s teaching trainees how to win battles and how to
stay alive, matters Lew knows a good deal about. In Korea,
as a platoon sergeant, he fought with the 2d Division at the Res-
ervoir, Heartbreak Ridge, Bloody Ridge and Hill 772.
After returning from Korea in 1952, he served as first sergeant
of the 6th Engrs., 63d Inf., and while ai Fort Benning, Ga., he took
the jump course and won his airborne badge
Later he transferred to Fort Ord, then volunteered for Korea
again. When he returned this time, he went to Fort MacArthur,
Calif., and led the Southern California area in recruiting men for
the RFA program.
Typically, most of the men he recruited were for the infantry.
“We really sold them on the program,” says Lew. “Got so many
recruits we worked ourselves out of a job,” thus explaining his
transfer to Fort Ord
* . *
WITH THREE YEARS in the cavalry at Fort Bliss, two more
in Japan in 1946-48, and six in his current stretch added to three
war years with the Coast Guard, Jenkins has almost 15 years of
service behind him. As an NCO, Jenkins feels that he can help
some of the privates get started right, help to give them pride in
their work, and maybe help to keep some of them alive if we get
into another fight.
“f don’t understand how a man can jump into the Army, put
in 20 years and then jump out again. I’m going all the way,” says
Lew Jenkins, a quiet, proud, and popular soldier.
Fort Chaffee Should Have
Fine Cage Team This Year
FORT CHAFFEE, Ark. — The
Jack Rowles, 5-10, St. John’s Col-
lege (Minnesota), and Gene Wof-
_eers in action
Fort Chaffee All-Stars expect to
be a top contender for the Fourth
Army basketball title on the
strength of seven returning vet-
erans and the depth of newly ac-
quired rookies.
All-American Arnold Short, the
team’s high scorer last year, will
be the center of attraction again
this season. The 6-3 Phillips Oiler
lad held a 28-point average last
year
* * o
DON THOME, 6-2 cager from St.
John’s College of Brooklyn, will
assist Short on the scoring end.
Last year Thome banged the bucket
for a 17-point average.
Other standout veterans back
with the All-Stars are Tom Tagatz,
6-3 (Drake University); John An-
derson, 6-2; Duane Mettler, 6-4;
ford, 5-11 (Arkansas State).
* * iT
PROMISING rookies include 6-5
Bob Huckaby (Mississippi College)
and Bill Seaberg (Iowa). Huckaby |
and Seaberg recently combined |
talents to lead Has. Btry, to the|
Basic Training Command title. |
Cage play at command level will |
start at Fort Chaffee Oct. 21. The
post tournament will be held Dec.
2-7, and the post quintet will begin
its schedule about Jan. 1.
Last year the All-Stars finished
second to the Fort Sill Cannoneers.
But Coach Bill Reyenga has high
hopes this year.
aid Reyenga: “With the same
team back and the added strength
of badly needed height, I don’t see
how we can be stopped.”
THIS ts any-
thing but a
ical shot of
e Fort Rich-
ardson Pion-
since the
cham pion-
ship Alaska
team lost two
yards on this
play. Joe Re-
gan, Richard-
son QB, is
about to be
nailed by Elm-
endorf Rocket
lineman Phil
Eskridge. The
man_ hitting
Regan from
behind is Ho-
mer Recktor,
Rocket end.
Guard Bennie
Williams
is moving in to
assist on the
tackle.
SAME OLD STORY IN ALASKA
Pioneers Complete Undefeated Season
ELMENDORF AFB, Alaska.—
The mighty Fort Richardson
Pioneers completed their fourth
straight undefeated season by wal-
loping the Elmendorf Rockets 24-7.
Richardson clinched the Alaska
football title earlier last month.
Mud and rain failed to stall the
running attack of the Army team
as Terry Cook, Dave Smith, Bobby
Brown, Art Davis and quarterbacks
Jim Jones and Dick Unchaper
shared ball-carrying honors. Phil
Stewart and Larry Cooper were
outstanding in the Richardson line.
The victory ran the Richardson
winning streak to 28 games.
Top Boxer Rotates
WITH 24TH DIV. IN KOREA.—
One of the nation’s better middle-
weights, who has been training box-
ers in the 24th Division for the past
year and a half, is ready to rotate.
He is George Benton, 34th Inf.
Regt. boxing coach. Before coming
into the Army, Benton had 35 pro
fights. He won 33, 19 on knockouts.
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With Smith and Brown doing
most of the running, the Pioneers
went 56 yards on 11 plays for the
first touchdown. Cook chipped in
with an 18 yard run before Smith
eracked over from the one in the
closing minutes of the first period.
Early in the second quarter,
Richardson went 67 yards on six
plays from scrimmage for the sec-
ond score. Davis capped the drive
by scampering 35 yards around
right end into the end zone.
In the fourth quarter, Cook went
around right end again for a touch-
down, this time from 34 yards out,
and Unchaper ran 46 yards for the
final Richardson touchdown.
Only Elmendorf TD was a 68-
yard run by Des Kock, 215 pound
fullback, shortly before the game
ended.
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— ”
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zone.
Cook went
r a touch-
yards out,
ds for the
wn,
was a 68-
215 pound
the game
LE
»S
EN
ish-
de-
ge.
and
nange
E Catalog
ON
ntucky
a _ OBITUARY
Ww ae
WASHINGTO ae
Renin ih
telex, diet ee
hand man” from
eae Brg Cam-
6 at Walter
noinr4 Burial was
a, Cemetery.
_ Commissioned by Pershing in
List of
1916, he sailed for France the fol-
lowing year along with the nu-
cleus of the A. E. F. From then
on the two men were rarely apart.
By special act, Congress had
given tg Col. Adamson the post of
“military secretary to the General
of the Armies,” so that he could
continue to serve Pershing after
passing the retirement age.
of Regular Army and AUS deceased commissioned officers,
officers and retired officers for whom reports of death were
auet during week ending 4 September 1957.
RANK a See DATE
PLACE OF DEATH
OCTOBER 19, 1957
ARMY TIMES 48
Mobile Dental Clinic Serves Washington Nike Sites
WASHINGTON—Toothache suf-
ferers in outlying Nike and AAA
bases in the Military District of
Washington no longer will have
tu travel to Fort Belvoir or Fort
Myer to visit the dentist.
Now the dentist comes to see the
pa’
This month MDW initiated some-
thing different in dental service—
a mobile dental clinic. Presently
located at the Lorton Nike site
south of Belvoir, the lab-on-wheels
Col. Collins said.
also will serve several other Nike
and AAA bases in the area, accord-
ing’ to Col. G. J. Cellins, dental
surgeon, MDW.
“The 38-foot long van houses a
complete two-chair dental clinic,”
“It contains a
fully equipped lab, X-ray unit,
complete facilities for tooth repair
and denture making.” He added it
is air conditioned and has its own
heating’ system. One officer and
two enlisted men staff the van.
The MDW mobile unit is one of
12 such denial vans put into opera-
tion by the Army during the past
two months. Col. Collins said two
are being used in the First Army
area, four in Second Army, two in
Fifth Army and three in Sixth
Army.
UCLA PMS&T
LOS ANGELES, Calif—Col. Wil-
liam §S. Bodner has ‘been named
PMS&T of the Univ. of Califernia
at Los Angeles.
Srhonls and Colleges
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5910 Sunset Bivd., Hollywood 28, Calif.
M. ad Lt. 22 Aug 57 Fort Benning, Ga.
Benson, Edward W. Maj. neta 23 Jun 57 Grosse Pointe Park, Mich.
Blake, Clayton A. Ist Lt. Retd 19 Jun 57 Paducah, Ky
Borslien, Russell E. Capt. Armor 3 Sep 57 Germany
Ciearelli, Lt. Col, 10 Aug 57 Cheyenne, Wyo.
DeRoy, Jay E. Jr. Maj. Reta 5 Aug 57 San Francisco, Calif.
Diekson, Robert 2a Lt. Retd 24 Jul 57 Castro Valley, Calif.
Arthur 58. cwo AGC 19 Aug 57 Stillwater, Calif.
Presley E. Col, Retd 15 Aug 57 Washington, D. C.
Roy D. Lt. Col, Retd 25 Jun 57 Escondido, A
Fitegerald, Terrance C. Inf 25 Aug 57 Korea
Wiliam W. Lt. Col. Retd 17 Jul 57 Somers Point, N. J.
7 Maj Retd 25 Aug 57 Maxwell AFB, Ala.
Kress, Una E. Lt. Col. Reta 2% Jun 57 Pacifie Grove, Calif.
Mason, George L. Col, Retd 16 Jul 57 Los Angeles, Calif.
Ritchie, Douglas ° Col, Retd 22 Jul 57 Temple City, Calif.
' Redriguez, Daniel 6 Retd 19 Aug 57 Fort Sam H Tex.
Seott, William R. ist Lt. Retd 30 May 57 Newington, Conn
Sents, James Capt. Fc 22 Aug 57 Camp Desert Reck, Nev
Thurber, Philip L. Col, Retd 4 Jul 57 Seattle, Wash.
‘Tobin, Ralph C. Brig. Gen. Retd 5 Aug 57 Washington, D. C.
Wilder, William T, Retd 19 Jul 57 Saint Paul, Minn.
During week ending 24 September 1957
RANK ARM/SVC DATE
Inf
PLACE OF DEATH
Algard, Norman N. Jr. 24 Lt. 22 Aug 57 Fort Benning, Ga.
. Lt. Col, Inf 4 Sep 57 Jacksonville, Fia.
Baker, Maude M. __ Capt. WMSC 10 Sep 57 Okinawa
Barclay, Capt. Reta 12 Jun 57 Orange, Tex.
Breath, i] Maj. Retd 15 Jul 57 San Antonie, Tex.
Broadus, Wendell M. Col. Retd 29 Jul 57 Nashville, Tenn.
Carey, Vincent J Maj. Retd 19 Jul 57 Buffalo, N. Y.
Cavell, Roscoe W. Col, Retd 13 Jul 57 Hemburg, Mich.
Christopher, ee 8. Capt. Retd 13 Jun 57 Santa Barbara, Calif.
Dapp, John A wo Retd 9 Sep 57 Denver, Colo.
Davis, Arthur ‘o. Col, Retd 7 Sep 57 San Francisco, Calif.
» Charlies R Capt. Retd 20 Jun 57 Mobile, Ala.
Durin, Patrick F. Maj. Retd 26 Aug 57 Not reported.
Fitchett, Jesse F. Maj. Retd 27 Jul 57 Richmond, Va.
Gunter, John H Lt. Col. Retd 22 May 57 Decatur, Il.
Gurjian, Leon K Col, Retd 17 Mar 53 Providenee, R. I.
Mallagan, Frank B. Col, Retd 1 Jul 57 Des Moines, lowa
Hesman, L Col. Retd 6 Aug 57 Indianapolis, Ind.
Howell, John S Capt. Retd 20 Aug 57 Detroit, Mich.
Huerkamp, Alvah M Capt. Inf 3 Sep 57 Chicago, Ml.
Jehnson, Willard H Col, Retd 17 Jul 57 Summit, N. J,
Kelley, Charles Maj. Retd 10 Jun 57 Yakima, Wash,
» Clemence cwo Retd 10 Aug 57. Baltimere, Md.
Ellis 2d Lt. Retd 8 Jul 57 Henderson, Ky.
Levejoy, William H. ist Lt. Retd 10 Jul 57 Dallas, Tex.
Pyper, Roi M. Col. Retd 6 Sep 57 Boise, Idaho
Reim, cwo Retd 5 Sep 57 San Francisco, Calif.
Spahr, Howard H. wo Retd 25 Jul 57 France
Stiebel, Harold Lt. Col. Retd 7 Jan 57 Les Angeles, Calif.
. ex, Wyhe E. Jr. Maj. Retd 9 Jul 57 Piggott, Ark.
Usher, M. Col, Retd 7 Sep 57 -Houston, Tex.
Utterback, Theodore H Maj. Retd 13 Aug 57 Bartlesville, Okla.
Ward, Ralph T. Col Retd 28 Jul 57 Denver, Colo.
Welch, George M Col Retd 3 Jul 57 Breeklyn, N. Y.
Wright, Robert E. Ist Lt Armor 18 Sep 57 Near New Summerfield,
Tex.
Smith, Clarence A. Jr. Capt 57 Washington, D. C.
41st AAA Gun Unit Being Inactivated
FORT TOTTEN, N. Y.—The 4lst
AAA Bn., a 90mm gun unit, is to
be removed from the Army Air
Defenses of New York. The an-
nouncement was made by Brig.
Gen. L. K. Tarrant, commanding
general, First Region, Army Air
Defense Command, Fort Totten.
The inactivation of the 41st by
Dec, 20 is part of a program aimed
at elimination ofall antiaircraft
gun battalions from the Continental
Air Defense scene.
The 4ist has been a part of the
air defenses of New York since
1951, became non- operational
Oct. 1.
The bulk of the personnel man-
ning the sites will be transferred
to other Army Air Defense Com-
mand installations.
AND R
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44 ARMY TIMES
:
ae a ie re ee ag ne ORE Pe rca er
OCTOBER 19, 1957
STAKE YOUR CLAIM
AG School Grad
Scores 99.9%
By GEORGE MARKER
“THIS MAN’S phenomenal accuracy approaches the ac-
curacy of the machines he has been studying,” says Lt, Col.
John Richards, department director of the AG School, Fort
Benjamin Harrison.
And the man is Pvt. Frank J.
Resnick who recently graduated
from the machine accounting
course with a score of .. . 99.9
percent, It’s the highest mark
tallied by any graduate in the
15-year history of the school.
The eight-week ‘course, which
has graduated 164 classes since
1942, deals with wiring and oper-
ational methods, and performance
of entry-level duties in MRUs.
This category is thrown open
to all, except Univac.
MSGT. EUGENE Hoosack is one
who frowns on photo finishes.
When he decided to enter the
Blood Donation Derby .. . he took
the event in a breeze.
Hoosack, of the 38th Msl. Bn.,
3d AAA Gp., Norfolk, Va., has
contributed 41 pints to the Tide-
water Blood Center, and earlier
gave another pint at Fort Bliss.
The’ 42-PINT TOTAL easily
passes MSgt. Al Tucker of Fort
Benning’s mark of eight gallons
even,
We're looking for an 11-gallon
donator.
OCS CLASS 6 at Fort Benning
has chalked up a post record in
the .30 cal. machine gun course.
According to Lt. Leonard Poh-
lod, the class of 150 qualified
36.77 percent of the men as “Ex-
pert” gunners.
Can any such similar unit top
these marvels?
COMBAT veteran of War II and
Korea, MSgt. Lewis H. Burruss,
Norfolk Army Base, turns out to
be one of the best-conditioned
men in the Army.
In 1947, after
years’ service, then 41-year-old
Burruss applied for and was ac-
cepted for the jump school at Fort
Benning . .. after being turned
Jown five years before because he
was too old.
From 1947-49, he completed 53
jumps with the school’s cadre.
Any more around like this top
soldier?
completing 20
MSGT. HOYT G. Greene, Re-
‘ruiting Service, Tuscaloosa, Ala.,
tells us he’s been discharged four
times from ’41 to ’50, and each
time his eyes were colored dif-
ferently: brown, green, blue and
grey
Keep your hands high, Hoyt,
and the color will remain constant.
AMONG the Army’s top mess
sergeants we’re happy to mention
the name of SFC James Batts, Co.
D, 3d Bn., 3d Tng. Regt., Fort Sill.
Here’s his battery record: 18
“superior” ratings in a row;
Group Best Mess, nine times,
and Post Award, four times.
How does this score card stack
WE’RE RUNNING into a little
tion from the Army Signal
Depot, Pirmasens, Germany.
The outfit has a Sgt. Jack
Darsmeck who made that grade
at 19, and they’re really excited
about it
Macy’s clams up to Gimbel’s...
but we’ll go along with the Depot's
misjudged enthusiasm. If anyone
can beat this mark, please write
te the PLO at Pirmasens, APO 189,
ymmpe
or to us and they can read it here.
Live and let live, we always say.
The recent addition of twins to
SFC and Mrs. Robert A. Nolan,
Naval Air Station, Camp Kure,
gave birth to a triple distinction
in this column.
Patricia and Michael Kelly
Nolan thus become the first set
of twins to be born at NAS Iwa-
kuni; the first American twins
to be born in the Iwakuni City
area, and the first twins born to
an Army family from Camp
Kure,
Congratulations . . . and we're
happy when Army beats Navy in
anything!
WE’VE the youngest EM to serve
in combat during War II in Sgt.
Jenkins at 15 years of age, but
here’s one just a little different.
SFC William R. Daniels of
Fort Bliss becomes the first to
claim he’s the youngest to serve
outside the States during War
II at 14 years, 10 months and 23
days, with the 388th Eng. Regt.
(GS )in the Alaska-Canada area.
Bill sure knows how to impro-
vise.
FIRST outfit to check in with
100 percent participation in Sol-
dier’s Deposits is the 566th Ord.
Det., Huntsville, Ala., a Nike Msl.
Direct Support Unit.
First to hit a perfect mark at
Redstone Arsenal, the 566th has
a strength of 47 EM.
Do I see any 100 percenters
counting over 47 EM?
SP3 JOSEPH Montagna of Fort
Richardson went all out to stake
his claim based on Operation Pay-
dirt.
During the all-out campaign,
Joe got four good ideas to im-
prove methods in his Alaska
outpost..It later turned out that
all four were adopted by
USARAL.
Who else batted 1.000 with at
least four times at bat?
IT NOW turns out that there
was no novelty in the circum-
stance which found two EM each
owning a pair of ASNs during a
span of four months.
Lt. R. N. Jones, Fort Benning,
and a group of some 30 others
enlisted at Camp Beale in 1946 and
were assigned an ASN beginning
with the first four digits of 1924
. . . & few months later another
Special Order was issued to
change it to 1928 etc., etc.
About the only factor remain-
ing to our original claim is that
Specialists Koehler and Moran,
25th Sig. Bn., held the IDENTI-
CAL ASN for four months.
Can we say this is unique?
REAMS OF PUBLICITY have
been written about the Marine
Corps’ pride in outfit. When it
comes to grinding stuff out about
“From the Halls of Montezuma,
etc.,” the Leathernecks stand at
the head of the class. They may
have better publicity men but we
doubt if they’ve better men than
the Army. The column can’t
prove it alone ... it needs the
help from privates, first sergeants
and commanders. Just send the
evidence to the CLAIMS EDI-
TOR, Army Times, 2020 M St.,
N.W., Washington 6, D. C.
/
YOURE IN
TERRIBLE SHAPE FOR A
YOUNG MAN! I'M ASSIGNING
YOU TO EXTRA SESSIONS Ay
PHYSICAL 4
© 197. King Peateres Syndicate, ex Weshd sighs. semened
AT YOUR
SERVICE
NO FLU SHOT
Q. My husband is on active
duty in the Army. When our baby
was born three weeks ago, my ex-
penses in a civilian hospital were
covered by the Dependents’ Medi-
cal Care program. It is my under-
standing that the Government will
also pay for immunization within
a certain period. Will flu shots
be included?
A. No. A recent resolution of
the State and Territorial Health
Officers indicates that influenza
immunization for infants under
three months of age is not recom-
mended. Therefore, influenza yac-
cine for newborn infants is not
authorized at Government expense
within the 60-day period follow-
ing delivery
” * *
IT’S UP TO CO
Q I have two questions: (1)
May shoulder sleeve insignia be
worn on the jacket, herringbone
or sateen? (2) Is the latter left
to the discretion of the command-
ing officer of the installation?
A. (1) When worn as an outer
garment. (AR 670-5); (2) The
commanding -officer prescribes the
uniform to be worn by his men,
“ * +
FRENCH GRATEFUL
Q. In 1945 did the French Gov-
ernment give to .each American
soldier stationed in-France a sum
of 850 francs (worth about $17 in
U.S. currency)?
A. Yes. Circular 113, 20 Aug.
1945, HQ USFET, Subject, “Pay-
ment of Adjusted Francs,” says
in substance that the French gov-
ernment has placed at the. disposal
of the U.S. Army a sum of money
to be given to the American. sol-
dier to increase his ‘purchasing
power, as a token of friendship.
It was discontinued in December
1945, when the franc was devalued.
tribes the
is men,
ench Gov-
American
ce a sum
ut $17 in
, 20 Aug.
et, “Pay-
es,” says
ench gov-
2. disposal
of money
rican. sol-
urchasing
endship.
December
devalued.
we have pre-
et
For your copy of the consoli-
dated list of stamp and coin col-
We will appreciate it if you in-
clude in your request the name of
the publication in which you read
- this column.
The Swap Club has ‘been in
operation since April 28, 1956.
Sinee that time we have forwarded
some 1300 letters to club members.
* ” 7 ”
DOMINICA. The Crown Agent
reports one new value and three
current values in new designs for
Dominica. Designs and values are:
Three-cent—mat making, black and
red; five-cent—canoe making, Tur-
quoise and Sepia; 10-cent (new
value) bananas, green and brown;
and 48-cent, mat making, sepia
and mauve, First day of sale:
October 15. The three, five and
48-cent stamps in the current is-
sue have been withdrawn from
sale.
7 . 7:
NEW ISSUE: A U.S. commem
honoring religious freedom in
America and the Flushing
Remonstrance, a protest by the
citizens of Flushing against a
law put into effect by Governor
Peter Stuyvesant violating the
principles of religious freedom.
Design and color of the stamp
will be announced later.
* * io
SWAP LIST. To get on the
TIMES list send your name and
interests to the Stamp Editor,
this newspaper. To contact any-
one on the list, send the number
of the person you wish to con-
tact together with a stamp for
each person to be contacted te
the stamp editor, Army Times
Publishing Co., 2020 ‘M’ St. N.W.,
Washington 6, D.C.
Additions this week:
548—Offers U.S. and foreign, all
used, for women in art and. sports
topicals.
549—Offers mint US for UN.
Also has US mint blocks and airs
for US plate blocks.
550—Civilian in Chile wishes
contact serious collectors. (10c
postage on this one).
551—US mint and used singles,
plates, precancels and birds on
stamps.
552—Private buyer of US coins.
* * *
SEND NEWS of stamp and coin
interest to: Stamp Editor, Army
Times Publishing Co., 2020 ‘M’
St. N.W., Washington 6, D.C.
Stamp and Coin
Directory
Stamp alburis and accessories available from
G. |. poe 1949 Boeing Avenue, Charies-
ton, S.C. 104 page catalogue 25 cents cirmail
65 cents,
Vatican 50 diff. $1.75. 100 $4.25. 150 $9.50.
200 $35.00 John Arnosti, 908 14th St, N.W.,
Washington 5, D. C.
OUR NEW 1957 FALL PRICE LISTS ARE
READY. ye od & Col. 15c, Middle & Far
East 10c, Bri Empire 10c, Latin America 5c.
Free: Our World Wide U.N. check list, Rotary
check list, Sports Sets list,
Antarctic list. Ask for our
wae New issue Service, and, if
aula interested, for “Stamps es
t. “
Investment.
INTERNATIONAL, 509 Fifth Ave.,
N.Y. 17, N.Y. OX 7-9288.
STAMPS
~
OCTOBER 19, 1957
ARMY TIMES 46
CHEV
Dobbins Street, Vacaville, California, ory
8-6887.
PLYMOUTHS 1957—Factory Authorized Deal-
er. Special Military Discounts on all models.
Financing at Bonk rates. Delivery Anywhere!
for lowest end terms. Write Jack
Cooper, Cooper iter Co., 3020 Broadway,
Oakland, California. =
NEW CAR
big discoun
Militery Auto Sales Co.
Box 342 (Tioga Bldg.) Berkeley, Calif.
AUTOMOBILES CALIFORNIA FLORIDA
NEW 1957 FORDS—Floridao—Detroit or east-
—— NEW 1958 AUTOMOBILES |‘ scvar Wigs siesnts, inencng
PONTIAC, Big Sevings to service folk, Fac- ranged. No State Tax. Write tor prices. Du-
tory or West Coast . Write Ed Nor- | ALL MAKES ALSO Selected guaranteed used | val Motor Company, P.O. Box . Jackson-
te Maeno Mie oer allele ee’ fotos ne |
oath Street, Oakland, Calif. ' Angeles, Califorsia.’ . GEORGIA
NEW CARS — Used cars—50 Miles from big ° °
city high rental expenses. Country tow prices USED CARS in COLUMBUS, GA. it's
a yews Coreen. BD Se vase Sue lament There is a SHARP used car waiting for you
p Mica = map hg us jo seg ne et Trevis A.F.B. Calif. 30 minutes delivery. INO. A. POPE MOTOR CO.
ps of practically sh makes and all types. Free courtesy cor urement service. Dial
te] Gended Motors, tne. fe or 52869. pawl , —., AD 9 (nerving Columbus since 1928)
5 cheaper. Lane , inc., Fairfield, Calif. thorized Dealer
698 So. First Street, San Jose, California u
od tales abt aetna tae Go feo NEW 1958 DODGE—PLYMOUTH
from Travis Air Force Base. Send prices FORD HEADQUARTERS Write for descriptive Literature and special
terms. STITH ROLET COMPANY 218 PACIFIC DIVISION Military prices.
ahest genuine factory bona fide discount.
Write for military purchase program. Satis-
faction guaranteed. Join the down payment
savings program. Immediate delivery anywhere.
insurance and financing furnished. Mr. Wright
Special Agent.
HAYWARD FORD MOTORS
Pacific Division
838 A Street
Hayward, California
COLORADO
NEW FORDS
big discount
Military Auto Sales Co.
Box 342 (Tioga Bidg.) Berkeiey, Calif.
NEW CAR
BIGGEST MILITARY DISCOUNT
FACTORY, NATIONWIDE AND OVERSEAS
Ne sales tax in most cases, We arrange in-
surance and financing ot special rates. Take
car everseas without refinancin Factory
warranty and free inspection w every cor.
Hun of happy past custemers. Reference
or @ny other informa’ furnished.
MILITARY AUTO SALES PANY, P.O. Box
342, (Tiege Bidg.), Berkeley, Calif.
OLDSMOBILES. Direct Factory outtet. Michi-
gon. or Sean Francisco erea Delivery, DAN
OSITCH, Connell Meteor Co y¥, 3093
+ sal Oakland, California. inook 3-
BEFORE YOU BUY ANYWHERE IN THE U.S.—
CHECK WITH US! Absolutely no obligation
and it might save you money and headaches.
Any er nt aoe or used—Federal
can show you to get the best financing,
service, warranty — the best automobile for
you! Write FEDERAL AUTOMOTIVE SERV-
ICES, 2297 Market Building, San Francisco
14, California.
NEW BUICKS at prices exclusively yours from
authorized dealer adjacent Fort Ord and Navy
Post-Graduate school, Write Military Sales
Department, Graham Buick Ce., Box 1047,
Monterey, Calif., for details.
PORT CALL
No problem embarking or
debarking when you can:
Finance up to 36 months,
Take your cor overseas or any-
where in States without refinancing.
Get the lowest money saving rates.
Take Immediate delivery.
Register and title where you wish,
We'll furnish you our Draft
which you can use
te pay for your new or
used car or to refinance.
MILITARY FINANCE CO.
2020 Milvic, P.O. Box 674
Berkeley, Calif. Telephone TH 5-2275
And
P.O. Box 2166 Sen Antonie, Texas
“Worldwide Financing for Military Personnel”
NEW FORDS”.
Ne tricks — No gimmicks, we specialize in
military accounts. Write for prices end liter-
ature. Authorized Factory Dealers.
AMES FORD SALES
806 Irwin Street
Son Rafeel, California
1958 BUICKS and OPELS
Buy from Factory Dealer Direct. Deliveries
made at Ookland, San Francisco, Flint, Michi-
gan Factory, or shipped overseas. Most com-
plete information air mailed to your mailing
address on request. Military net prices for
ordered cars or from our stock only available
thru FRED LEWERTOFF Military Sales Mana-
r, MURPHY BUICK CO., 2101 Harrison $t.
land 12, Calif. Temple Bor 2-3400.
FORD — MILITARY and GOVERNMENT EM-
PLOYEES. Write Bill Schmidt, military sales-
pene ard for Special new and used car prices.
Complete oe Insurance, and ~A-
Wey Plan. Deliveries a re and overseas,
Save time and money thru authorized deal-
ers only. Cirimele Ford Sales, 3321 Broadway,
Oskiand, Calif, TWinocks $-4567.
1958 BUICKS
Detailed Intermotion ‘Air Mailed 's your Mil
yo Me on request. FRED LEWERTOEF
22% DISCOUNT
1958 DeSotos, Plymouths
VERY RELIABLE AND SUBSTANTIAL
DEALER DETROIT OR DENVER DELIVERY
CROUCH MOTOR COMPANY
1OTH & PEARL, BOULDER, COLORADO
MARYLAND, VIRGINIA &
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
OLDSMOBILE—NEW or USED — Order with
confidence from WASHINGTON, D.C.’s oldest
Oldsmobile dealership. Established 1919. Spe-
cial Lay-away Pian available for future de-
livery. lity service. Terms to fit your
budget. Try us and see. Write Military Rep-
resentative, POHANKA OLDSMOBILE, 1126
20th Street, Northwest, Washington, D.C.
PONTIAC
IN WASHINGTON, D.C.
Contact Ed Skotta, General Manager, BEN
DALL PONTIAC, 1625 Price Street, Alexan-
dria, Virginia, OVerlook 3-1600 for special
price list. A stock of sixty Pontiocs at all
times. Immediate delivery—Special Lay-a-woy
Plan available.
THE CHEVY PLACE
in Washington, D.C.
IS CHEVY CHASE
At this same location since 1940 under the
same ownership and selling the same fine
product, we are proud to number more than
20,000 members of the military forces among
our valued customers. Always a full selection
of 1957 Chevrolets — smart, smooth and
sassy. Competitive prices. Sensible GMAC
financing terms. Write for further details.
CHEVY CHASE CHEVROLET
7725 Wisconsin Ave. Bethesda, Md.
NEW CHEVROLETS
NEW OLDSMOBILES
ONLY $300. DOWN
Plus Special Military Discounts. Call or Write
Mr. Lew Suttka, Military Sales Manager
ANDERSON CHEVROLET
“Maryland’s Largest Auto Dealer’
4600 Edmondson Ave., Baltimore, Md.
Phone: Longwood 6-5600
OLDSMOBILE
ON MILITARY DISCOUNT PLAN write T/Sot-.
Armfield for details of Military Loy-away
Plan. c/o Olmstead Motor Co,
Bivd. Arlington, Virginia.
COMING TO
WASHINGTON, D. C. AREA?
You can’t buy a
CHEVROLET
for less anywhere in
the world than at
LOVING
CHEVROLET
SILVER SPRING (14)
2000 Wilson
MD.
Hf Sales M r, MURPHY BUICK CO.
2101 Herrison S$t., Oakland 12, Calif.
13th St. at 3rd Ave. P.O. Box 287
CHEVROLET - ATLANTA, GA.
Fleet Pricés to Service Personnel
No required down pay t, 36 months to pay.
Write for free folder and prices,
NALLEY'S CHEVROLET
2555 Stewart Avenue
Atienta, Ga.
OLDSMOBILE - FORT BENNING, GA.
As Low As $2467.
Please Write
Lt. Col. Weodrow W. Millsaps (Ret.)
RUCKER OLDSMOBILE, INC.
1300 ‘S$’ Avenue — Columbus, Ge.
ILLINOIS
GOOD USED CARS
COST LESS IN CHICAGO!
MICKEY CHEVROLET
4501 WEST IRVING PARK RD.
CHICAGO 41, ILLINOIS
Send for Serviceman‘s Price List
Call JOHN STEPHANI, SPRING 7-2000
ILLINOIS
CHEVROLET — CHICAGO
Send name and address for free catalog and
special prices for servicemen. Or telephone
person to person collect (SPRING 7-2000) ask
for Ed Stepheni, Jack Stephani, John Wathen
or Warren Cusser.
NICKEY CHEVROLET
4501 West Irving Park R., Chicege 41, Mil.
pest MICHIGAN
BIGGEST DISCOUNTS. Brand new 1957 Ply-
mouths, DeSotos. Free delivery anywhere in
the U.S.A. to your base, home er car wait-
ing for you at your port. Overseas shipments
arranged. Financing, insurance, free warranty
and inspection anywhere in U.S.A. Deal di-
rect with owner of Detroit's largest DeSoto-
Plymouth factory authorized dealer. Hundreds
of military men have saved the most money
with our deal, No postage needed for reply.
S. L. Brand, 3000 Fenkell, Detroit 38, Michi-
gon.
DODGE—PLYMOUTH
Special discounts for Service Personnel. Just
5 minutes from downtown, Canfield Motor
Sales, inc. “Factory direct dealer.” 2966
Gratiot, Detroit 7, Michigan. Telephone LO
3155.
NEW 1957 CADILLACS—All models. For in-
formation write Chester Pospey, 20239
Domman, Detroit 36, Michigan, TU 4-0903.
a la
Brochure and price list with special end of
model discounts. Finest servicemen‘’s deal in
the U.S.A. Layaway deposit plan. Winner
Pontioc Motors “Better Dealer Award” 8&
straight years. Write R. Delecke, sales mana-
er.
. WOODY PONTIAC
12140 Jos. Campau, Detroit 12, Michigan
OLDSMOBILE — DETROIT
BUY DIRECT FROM DETROIT from one of
America’s largest volume dealers. We sell
more and save you more. Delivery anywhere.
Servicemen ond civilians state model, acces-
sories and finencing wanted. WRITE ART
LAICH, SHELDON OLDSMOBILE, 8421 Michi-
gon, Detroit 10, Michigan, Tiffany 6-4800.
CHEVROLET — DETROIT
We guerantee lowest prices. At our prices,
unable te pay commissions or send representa-
tives overseas. Delivery anywhere, no tax—
drive-away sticker. Factory direct dealer. Geo.
Ridenour, Military Representative, c/o Mack-
Gratiot Chevrolet, 3151 Gratiot, Detroit 7,
} YIN OY ASL TTT TT ee PE
ULNA) POOLS} TUES ENA gg
; MICHIGAN
STUDEBAKER, PACKARD. Authorized Factory
a» Dealer. Special Military Discounts. Ker!
A Hosten,15205 £. Jefferson, Grosse Pointe
Michigan. VA 2-1450.
DON’T
BUY
A
NEW
CAR !!
Until you have received our complete infor-
mation and prices for ALL POPULAR MAKE
NEW CARS. Find out why so many are buying
from us—it “ain't” because we're Good Look-
ing. Deliveries made in Detroit P.O.€.’s or
anywhere in the U.S.A. For additional in-
formation such as drive-away permit, elimina-
tion of Michigan Sales Tax, Personal Services,
Prices and our Tremendous Savings, send a
Stamped self-addressed envelope to the Sales
Representative for Michigan's Finest Sales
Authorized Dealers for Ford, Chevrolet, Ply-
mouth, etc,
E. P. KOVARY — C. W. SCHMID
12031 Mitchell St.
TWinbrook 2-6500; WArwick 8-5274
TUxedo 4-1465
FORDS for military personnel SAVE! SAVE!
SAVE! Detroit’s finest dealer will NOT be
undersold, Satisfied Servicemen everywhere.
Finance, Insurance. Delivery anywhere. Harry
Black, Fleet Sales Division 3516 — 3° Mile,
Detroit 24, Michigan.
CHEVROLETS COST LESS IN DETROIT. Buy
Direct. Special consideration to Military per-
sonnel, Write for prices, terms and catalog.
Insurance arranged. Addresses of satisfied
servicemen on request. Tom Ruen Fleet Sales.
16350 Woodward, Detroit 3, Michigan.
ein siinnatagineineeaninas
PLYMOUTH—DETROIT
Write for lowest prices and terms. Louis Rose,
Detroit’s oldest DeSoto-Piymouth Dealer.
16430 Woodward Ave., Detroit 3, Michigan.
TO 8-3300,
CHEVROLET — DEAL WITH the automobile
capital’s volume dealer. Direct factory out-
let. Immediate Delivery. We can arrange fi-
nancing and insurance. Inquiries promptly
answered. Write Lee Tysar Sales Mgr. 6250
Woodward, Detroit, Michigan.
‘58 OLDS
STAN LONG
SETS THE PACE
No sales tax to outstate
anywhere in the U.S.
buyers,
Bank
delivery
rates,
Write JOE ANSTETT
for free brochure
25 years of fair dealing
DON'T GO WRONG
SEE STAN LONG
13900 W. Warren
Dearborn, Michigan
LUzon 1-0400 DUnkirk 3-8502
NEW ‘57 FORDS
BUY DIRECT FROM DETROIT’S No. 1
VOLUME DEALER AND SAVE:
20% Military Discount
(approx. $600 or more)
Freight Charges
Tax free to Out of State Buyers
Nationwide Factory Guarantee
Insurance arranged and credit approval with-
in 30 minutes. We do business with all Gov-
ernment Employee’s Finance or any Bank in
the United States. Overnight accommodations
Grranged and transportation furnished from
Airport or Train Depot
WRITE... CALL... OR WIRE JOE KARL
For late Model Used Cars with a 100% one
full year guarantee anywhere in the United
States or Canada, contact DOUG DEACON,
FLOYD RICE SALES & SERVICE, INC.
14300 Livernois, Detroit
MERCURY—DETROIT
Largest Michigan Direct Dealer
Best Prices, Fast Delivery, Lowest Bank Rates.
For Free Catalog, Prices and Details, Write
BUSTER KEETON
EVANS LINCOLN MERCURY, INC
12955 Grand River Ave., Detroit 27, Michigan
TExas 4-3685
BUY YOUR NEW CHEVROLET
where Chevrolet makes them. Deol direct
with the world’s Largest Authorized Chevrolet
Dealership No freight charges. No soles tax.
Drive away sticker to destination—good for
30 days, no brokers fee or commissions, Special
consideration for all servicemen. be out
deal and convince yourself on why we sell
the most. Contact Guy Korte, military repre-
sentative at Don McCullagh Inc. direct factory
dealer. 16700 Harper, Detroit 24, Michigan.
SEND FOR OUR PRIOE LI&?
Michigan.
TUxedo 1-7600.
46 ARMY TIMES
-
OCTOBER 19, 1957
aerseece AUTO MART Zs fro)
AUTOMOBILES
MICHIGAN
CHRYSLER — PLYMOUTH
Brand New Cars
Tremendous discount to members of the
Armed Forces, Reserves. No state sales tox
or freight. Bank financing at tow rates.
Choose your insurance company Prompt de-
livery anywhere in U.S.A For complet. de-
tails send stamped addressed envelope to-
day. Our deal will surprise you. Colville
Brown Co., 6340 Schaefer Road, Dearborn,
Mich. Authorized factory Chrysler-Plymouth
Dealers. Same location 25 years.
CHEVROLETS COST LESS AT
HANSON CHEVROLET COMPANY
DIRECT FACTORY DEALER
Write for particulars on the new 1957 Chev-
rolet. Also real savings on brand new 1957
carryover models ,
4295 Mack Ave. Detroit 15, Mich.
VAliey 2-9800
NEW CARS
IMPERIAL—CHRYSLER—PLYMOUTH
Buy from Detroit's Largest Dealer. New 2-
Big locations, Through volume we have de-
vised @ special Armed Forces, Reserves buy-
ing plan. Low rate financing and insurance
with company of your choice Send your in-
quiry in self addressed stamped envelope to
Fleet Manager, Military Division.
BILL SNETHKAMP’S :
17437 Third Ave 18500 Livernois
Detroit 3, Mich. Detroit 21 Mich.
SU 8-5850 4-2800
All Out of Stote Business Tox FREE
‘57 MERCURYS
AT
LOWEST DETROIT PRICES
Ne Sales Tax To Outstate Buyers. Delivery
anywhere in the U.S. In Business since 1935.
Write To
CAMPSIE & SWEENEY. INC.
Authorized Mercury Dealers
3845 W Fort St.
Detroit 16, =
NEW
NEW “JERSEY
NEW |
57 BUICKS
AUTHORIZED BUICK DEALER
$100
OVER COST
15 minutes from McGuire AFB, Fort Dix. Lake-
hurst—1 hour from NYC, Brooklyn, Phila
Call us, we pick you up We use no represen-
tatives, taxi drivers, hotel clerks, etc. making
@ commission on your purchase.
COLEMAN BUICK
620 €. STATE ST, TRENTON, NJ.
EXport 4-511]
1958's YEAR AHEAD — 1958's
Plymouths and Chrysiers at best final dollar
price with full warranty and service from
reputable, experienced, tactory dealer. Re-
turning overseas personnel met on arrival
with car licensed and all paper work com-
pleted. No State Sales Tax and choice of
lowest rate financing and insurance. Addi-
tional saving at Detroit fact&y. Most com-
plete free information available. No over-
seas representatives. F. §. Pearson Sons, Inc.,
Dept. Some, Ay Hurffville, N.J
1958 NEW 1958
PLYMOUTHS & CHRYSLERS
300D & Imperials
Best prices on new 1958 Plymouths, Chrys-
lers and fabulous imperiais Full factory
warranty and new car service. We are a direct
factory dealer. We meet returning overseas
personnel. With the licensed car and all
paper work completed We are 112 hr. drive
from New York City. No state sales tax.
Lowest possible financing & tnsurance. Send
for complete free information
MAUK MOTORS
Park & Evergreen Ave
Woodbury, New Jersey
-CHEVROLET— NEW JERSEY
Seen the rest? Now see the best! Thousands
of satisfied servicemen say, “Your best buy
is Brahms!” Special courtesy and sensational
money saving discount deals for all service-
men. No sales tax. Conveniently located 1
mi ute from Jersey Turnpike, 3 minutes from
N.Y. Thruway. Low-Cost GMAC financing.
Write or phone Stanley Taylor, 118 Broad Ave.,
Palisades Park, BRAHMS Chevrolet, N.J.
Windsor 4-2700
NEW YORK
CHEVROLET—NEW YORK
SPECIAL MILITARY DISCOUNTS
BY NEW YORK’S
CHEVROLET
FINANCING AT
DELIVERY AT
OR FLINT, MICHIGAN
WRITE FLEET SALES DEPT.
way CHENEW YORK 31, seh ¥.
3300 BROADWAY
PLYMOUTH - NEW YORK
LIBERAL DISCOUNTS
* SERVICE ee
NEW YORK’S ONL
EXCLUSIVE PLYMOUTH
DEALER: WRITE
FLEET. SALES MANAGER
HALL PLYMOUTH CORP.
3320 BROADWAY, NEW YORK 31,
CHRYSLER — PLYMOUTH — IMPERIAL
Write us for model and equipment you de
sire—we will yon you eur cost price plus
8 vercent — finance terms te suit you
HENRY CAPLAN, INC. Authorized Factor
Distributor. Established over 35 years. 14
Bedford Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y. INgersol 7-8000.
NEW PONTIACS
Save 27% Prices start at $1930-—-8% lay-
away plan. GMAC Financing—1! hour delivery
No City Sales Tax to Out of Town Buyers
Nationwide G. M. Factory guarantee. Near-
est Pontiac dealer to Airport and Ports of
Arrival. Free family Pick-up Service. Call
us soon as you land. WRITE TODAY for free
brochure and information to Finegold Pontiac,
Inc., 510 Beach 20th St., Far Reckaway 91
N.Y. Far Rockaway 17-0040 In our 32nd year
NORTH CAROLINA
NORTH CAROLINA AREA
NY.
Special Military Discounts ond Financing
For Active and Reserve Personnel
LINCOLN—‘57—MERCURY
Contact Harvey Snipes, Owner-Mgr. Central
Service Motor Co., Goldsboro, N.C. Phone
2340.
Chevrolet-Fort Bragg Pope Field
Best Military deols. Write Smith Bros
Chevrolet Co., Spring Lake, N.C
OHIO
CHEVROLETS
DEAL WITH A FELLOW Gi
Maximum —- guaranteed
WRITE
Pvt. Ed Stinn Jr.
2125 South V
Fort Smith, Arkansas
°
Ed Stinn Chevrolet
21201 Center Ridge
Cleveland 16, Ohio
OREGON
‘58 AUTOS-LOWEST PRICES
immediate delivery as announced — through
Franchised Dealers PORTLAND, Oregon, LOS
ANGELES, SAN FRANCISCO, MICHIGAN,
KENTUCKY and NEBRASKA delivery. For free
price lists on various makes write Harold
Roberts, 931 S.W. Gaines, Portland, Oregon
COMPARE _ COMPARE
Ford, Mercury, Lincoln. Franchised dealer for
45 years—West Coast and Detroit delivery—
layaway plan—no sales tax—tell me model
and equipment wanted. My reply via airmail.
Dick Cook — Francis, 509 S. E. Hawthorne,
Portiand, Oregon
COMPARE COMPARE —
SOUTH CAROLINA
SOUTH CAROLINA'S LARGEST AND
CHARLESTON’S ONLY FORD DEALER
Closest deals and special service to military
personnel on American- and English-built
Fords.
PAUL MOTOR CO., INC
Since 1918
One Year Guarantee on Used Cars
P.O. Box 193, Charleston, $.C
Charleston, S. C.
IT'S FRANK NORRIS MOTORS
For
Lowest Prices—immediate Delivery
Dodges—$2073 Up
Plymouths—$1795 Up
1 Year Guarantee on Used Cars
FRANK NORRIS MOTORS
376 Meeting St.
Charleston, $. C.
FORT JACKSON for Best Deals on DeSoto-
Plymouth and top — used cars. Contact
Marion Burnside & Sons, 2015 Gervais Street,
Columbia, S.C.
| Hf
DINI
“George, dear, your retirement ee over We
SOUTH CAROLINA
FORD — CHARLESTON
AIR FORCE BASE
Within 11 miles (20 minutes)
Pratt Motor Company
Summerville, $.C.
Authorized Ford Deelers
Small dealer — low overheed
Special consideration for Military Personnel
Phone Summerville collect 2531 er 8325
We will pick you up at Air Terminal
LINCOLN —- MERCURY
CHARLESTON, S.C.
inquire about military discounts on ‘57 Big
M. Special military financing—Layeway pian.
Write R. J. Dolan, Dolan Lincoln-Mercury,
676 King Street
Chevrolet—Myrtle Beach, S. C.
Special Military Deals. New & Used Cars.
Factory Authorized Deoler Write:
Strand Chevrolet Ce.
DESOTO- PLYMOUTH, CHARLESTON
Carolina’s largest DeSoto dealer. Write or call
B. L. Rushing, Renken Motors, 656 King St.
Special! Deals to service ee, outh
Charleston, §$.C Phone )_3-2526.
CHEVROLET
CHARLESTON, SOUTH CAROLINA
Special deals to service personnel. Write Ver-
non Riles, Sales Mgr. 20 years authorized
dealer.
FORT SUMTER CHEVROLET CO.
1111-1123 EAST BAY ST., CHARLESTON, S.C.
Phone 3-7211
CHEVROLET—OLDSMOBILE
Near Charleston A.F.8., Best Service deals,
Low overhead. Over 20 years Authorized Deal-
er. Write A. M. Jones, E. M. Jones Chevrolet
Co,, Summerville, $.C. Tel. 4721
—| JUICKS—Wyrtle Beach A.F.B.,S.C.|*
Best Military Deals. Delivery Charleston A.F.B.
& Other Military Establishments. Factory
Dealer Since 1950. Write E. L. Pinson, Pinson
Buick Co., Myrtle Beach, $.C.
EDSEL—CHARLESTON, SO. CAROLINA
NOW get the facts on the 1958 ali new
EDSEL. BEST Military Deals. Write Victory
Auto Soles, 3245 Rivers Ave., Charleston Hgts.,
Cc
TEXAS
CADILLACS-OLNS. Col. Henry Bailey, USAF
Ret Authorized Factory Dealer, Alpine, Texas.
WASHINGTON STATE
| STILL HAVE the HOTTEST DEAL ON HOT
TEST CAR — ‘57 CHEVROLET, DON FLECK,
Westlake Chevrolet, SEATTLE.
AUTOMOBILE LITERATURE
AUTOMOBILE CATALOG entitied “New Auto-
mobiles for Active Duty Militar Personnel at
a Most Attractive Discount.” Gres 20 pages
covering financing, how te order,
equipment, color codes, prices, etc.,
Chevrolet, Plymouth, oe Mercury,
Lincoln, Buick, Pontiac, DeSoto,
Chrysler, Studebuker. Factory, ae + Jersey,
Texas-Okiahoma and California deliveries ar-
ranged through Factory-Authorized (FRAN-
CHISED) new car dealers, Send 12 cents post-
age, LOGAN MILITARY SALES, Bex 309,
Weatherford, Oklahoma. Operated by D. Ww.
Logan, Ledr., USN (Ret.)
standard
on Ford,
MAIL ORDER MART
AGENTS WANTED
NEED EXTRA MONEY? |
Show Coronet Christmas Cards!
@ Make BIG 40% commission!
@ Ne cost te -you!
Write NOW! . te:
Coronet Line—Dept 25
676 West Grand Boulevard
Detroit 16, Michigan
FREE Wholesale catalogue of Watches; Watch
Bands. an Weddi and Engagement
Rings, Be our agent in your outfit. S. J.
Siegel, a5 Fitth Avenue, New York 17, N.Y.
$5.00 HOUR SPARE TIME showing Heavy
Polished Brass Desk Nameplates. FREE kit
Gardner, Dept. AA-1, 1702 West Summit Ave.,
San Antonio, Texas.
Military and Civilian Personnel!
Representatives Wanted!
Large U.S. automobile export company wishes
to appoint NCOs, officers or DACs to repre-
sent them in spare time, taking orders for
stateside delivery. Leads furnished. No solicit-
ing. Earnings from $300 te $500 per month.
Easy to learn. Complete details furnished.
For information write Army Times, Box 100
681 Market St., Sen Francisco, Calif
FREE CATALOG. Lowest wholesale prices. Ne-
tionally known merchandise. NORRIS, 487 AT
Broadway, New York.
NEED EXTRA MONEY? Show our personally
printed stationery. Six colors, Airmail, in-
Sedum Sener ie oe
diana.
AIR FORCE — ARMY — NAVY — SRIGHT
SILVER or GOLD WINGS on leather
Inalgnie' $1.00. No CODs, COLEMAN'S
plates, Sox 1117, West Sacramento, Calif.
eat Ag tnt Bay Be Sane
on orders Fa! yo or more. He ‘s-
Checks : NAMEPLATES, ?.0. Box 6965,
Congress Heights Station, Washington 20,
NAME TAPES. Long ten of one name,
pa aga om cope, y large
Sich ss iomeny, estes, thoes Pee eae
NICKEL PLATED BRASS NAME TAGS:
Mirror, Polished. Ciutch fastener, Last nome.
initials, $1.50. AGENTS WANTED! Gerdner,
1702 West Summit Ave., San Antonie, Texas.
NAME TAGS
Attractive. Biack Plastic or Oxidized Alumi-
num, other colors available. $1.00 Ea. Re-
duced Prices for $ ron Orders. With SAC
crest $2.00 each. Coleman's Nameplates, Box
1117, West Sacramento, Calif.
EMBROIDERED, Gny color en any color tune, tape,
ready to sew on fatigues, etc. guaran’
2ermanent, 6 tapes $3.95, mailed anywhere,
add 10c postage. GORDON’S, 1234 W. Baiti-
more St., Baltimore 23, Maryland.
COLOR PHOTO FINISHING
KODACHROME DUPLICATES OF 8mm
lémm Film Tle per foot.
Hollywood lémm tndustries,
Sante Monica Bivd., Los A
fornia.
DESK NAMEPLATES
DESKPLATES-GOLD LETTERS. in biack plastic.
Name, rank, service, $1.50. Peterson, 2420
North Oak Park Avenue, Chicage 35, iiinois.
DESKPLATES—HEAVY POLISHED BRASS, En-
graved name, rank, service, $2.95. AGENTS
WANTED! Gardner, 1702 West Summit Ave.,
San Antonio, Texas.
DETECTIVE INSTRUCTION
DETECTIVES — Work Home—Travel—Secret
investigation. Experience unnecessary. . De-
tective particulars free. Write George Ar-
thur Wagner, 125 West 86th St., New York.
signias. E money. Free kit. Specialt
Printers, Lapeen, Missouri. ahaa: DIAMONDS
AiDS
SCORE HIGH ON AFQT, OCS, GED, GCT, AC,
CE tests, prepare quickly with genuine ChaM-
WELL study aids, a and answers. Used in
College and high hoo! GED ‘study guide,
Oo an ‘schoo study gui
$2.00. College aptitude tests, $2.50. OCS-
GED, $7.00. NARGT- a. $3.25 (includes
pattern anal ics) Aviation
Flight Aptitude, $3. 95. College and high
school Equivalence GED examination, $5.00.
High correlation with nationally standardized
tests. All four test kits complete with ac-
cessories and free college study guide, $12.00
erepeitr Cramwell Test Service, 8-7 Adams,
ass. |
FREE Booklet “How To De Your Best On
Your Test.” Applicable to any Armed Forces
Test. Write, Bootstrap Projects, 332 Buford,
Montgomery, Ala
RAISE MECHANICAL APTITUDE SCORE with
illustrated beok, ‘“Mechanical Aptitude Tests,”
$2.50. Bootstrap Projects, 332 Buford, Mont-
gomery, Ala.
APTITUDE TESTING
PLANNING YOUR CIVILIAN FUTURE? Job?
School? What kind? Aptitude, personality
tests help you choose scientifically. Details
free. Guidance Associates, 1714A Ocean Park-
way, Brooklyn 23, N.Y. Established 1938.
BOOKS
GENUINE TESTS. Score high on AFQT, ACS,
GED, GCT, etc. Read “SCORE HIGH” ad-
vertisement under “Aids.” Cramwell Test
Service, Adams, Mass.
GED, OCS, AFQT, etc., tests made easy. Sim-
plified method, PRACTICE--TESTS containing
answers, including Folio Pattern Analysis,
$3.00. Also amazing book, MATHEMATICS
MADE SIMPLE, $2.00. All $4.50: Bootstrap
Projects, 332 Buford, Montgomery, Ala
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
FINE DIAMONDS
You CAN yo a UP To 40 PERCENT on single
prices, by ordering
direct wll here the world’s largest cut
diamond market. Give diamonds for birth-
days—to your wife, your fiance—buy for in-
vestment, for personal use. Please Write air-
mail for price list. DIAMOND EXPORTER, P.O.
Box 139-B, ANTWERP, Belgium.
SERVICEMEN: BEFORE YOU BUY A DIOMOND
know all facts and figures about Pe ge special
tax and duty-free privileges amazing
savings available now. APO-FPO Sattvory only.
Write airmail for full int
Goldenstein, Milifary Export, Department 62,
Pelikaanstraat, Antwerp 1, Belgium.
EDUCATION & TRAINING
BARTENDING: None can te with
TRAINED men for the BEST pay and TIP
jobs. Oldest school. American Bartending, 336
S. Wabash, Chicago 4.
STOP STAMMERING! Cure Yourself at home
with Emery correspondence course. SATISFAC-
TION GUARANTEED. Details FREE. Write
pond Institute, Box 867-72, Winter Park,
lorida.
BE A REAL ESTATE BROKER. Study at home.
Write for Free Book foday. Gi approved.
Weaver School of Real Estate, 2016G Grand,
Kensas City, Missouri.
CHICAGO SCHOOL OF AUTOMATIC TRANS-
MISSIONS AND AUTOMOTIVE MECHANICS,
INC. 6108 South Cottage Grove Avenue,
Chicago 37, filinois. Fairfax 4-5190. G.I. AP-
PROVED.
.T.S. DIESEL Training qualifies you for od-
vancement and better pay jobs in Armed
Forces and future civilian fife. LTS. hedvy
ft men always in demand. Use spore-
BUY WHOLESALE FOR yourself or for resale.
Sell name brand appliances, jewelry, house-
wares, gifts, premiums. Write today for free
big colorful catalog with yg price
list. Immediate delivery from our $500. .00
inventory. Conelle Products Co., ” Dept.
6, 343 W. 26th St., N.Y.C,
Inc.,
time in service to train for big pay Diesel
jobs. Servicemen in all theatres now taking
course. 1.T.S. Placement Advisory Service
helps eli te job hunting worries. fone
low tuition for servicenren. Write today fer
free information, Interstate Training Service,
Dept. 8-47, Portland 13, Oregon.
E| | \SSSets | (MR) BRTEIERGESS)
fe
AF R
. ALO
.. Pe
4 3A
OCTOBER 19, 1957
ARMY TIMES 47
by Schuffert
”
Hi Mets
ie
oT
|
i
En-
ENTS
Ave.,
ecret
Ar-
York.
with
Tie
AC-
rite
ork,
me.
ved.
and,
NS-
AP
sh See fon,
GA=REAL ESTATE MARTARc: |
APARTMENTS & HOTELS
VIRGINIA
Seereert manned $70 1 and 2 bedroom
6.50 te $97.50. Fur-
sited #10100 to, $135.00 includes ‘utilities
Many Drive (aver even Comer) Falls. Church,
REAL ESTATE
CALIFORNIA
MONTEREY, CALIFORNIA for housing contact
RUDONI-AITKEN AGENCY, Monterey, Cail-
CALIFORNIA STATE GOVERNMENT LANDS
$10 to $25 acre in 40 to 640 acre tracts.
Pioneer Ranch Sites $50 down, $25 monthly.
Free catalog. Pioneer Ranches, inc. 7419-AT
Beverly Bivd., Los Angeles 36, California.
SAN FRANCISCO AREA—New three bedroom,
twe beth homes c to all bases. For in-
10.me@tion write STONESON HOMES, 3150 20th
venue, Francisco, California.
pete! de ng CALIFORNIA PROPERTIES. We
secielize in San Gabriel Valley. Our experi-
pe sales staff are all former servicemen,
aey can best ap jate your problems. Many
¢ .oice residential, income properties for sale
end for rent. Write: Charles J. Tinucci, Col.
«AF Res., Tinucci Realty, 708 W. Huntington
«the Arcadia, California.
. ALO ALTO — STANFORD AREA! Col. H.
. Perkins (USA Ret.), Major Archie A. Tower
_SAF Ret.), Leder. Donald Brooks (USN Ret.),
) California Avenue, Pale Alto, DAvenport
557.
4 FRANCISCO BOUND? WHITECLIFF
. MES are within minutes of all major mili=
y installations, New 3 er 4 bedrooms, 2-
as, electric kitchen. Landscaped and
.sced. From $15,545, os low as $1000 down.
:@ In-service loans. Whitecliff Homes, P.O.
Lox 126, San Bruno.
FLORIDA
len ey LOT: $5 ge tah gh
Beech. Streets, electricity,
Near ocean St. Johns
river. tren Ww Ys best fishing! Write for FREE
tos. F. V, Huysmen, Box $26, Orange City,
lerida.
SEBRING, FLORIDA. Live — Vacation — in-
vest or Retire a the Coves. Choice
Lots 75° by 135’. Tetel $775. NO "MONEY
WN. $10 monthly. Close te fish t-
ing— oo My Write Sebring
pa inc. 1111 0. Venetion. Miami 39,
rt
$133.
NEW MEXICO
IN ALBUQUERQUE, New Mexico more service
people rent and buy from Weogley Agency,
11l Wyoming NE.
NORTH CAROLINA
RETIREMENT Vacatieniand, .Homes, Farms,
Businesses, Charles Jones, Dolbee Reality, Hen-
dersonville, North Carolina,
SOUTH CAROLINA
MYRTLE BEACH, SOUTH CAROLINA
Seles, Rentols, Insurance since 1937. John A.
McLeod, Inc.
HOMES IN CHARLESTON, S.C.
New Sherwood Forest. Three or four bedroom
homes: | Priced $10,300 to $14,000 for “‘in-
service’ of F.H.A. loans. Convenient to Mili-
ay Bases, Schools, Shopping. Jahnz Const.
evelopment Co. 312 People Bidg. Charles-
ton, S.C. Phone 32458.
TEXAS
SAN ANTONIO. Renting? Buying? Our staff,
chiefly retired Military, will solve your hous-
ing Problems. BEN LAMBERT REALTORS,
1053 Austin Highway, Sen Antonio, Texas,
VIRGINIA
“YOU'LL LIKE IT TOO”
A recent national survey selected Santa Rosa
among the five best cities of comparable size
-& which to live. For complete details write
W. A. Edgar, Coddin
vy, Senta Rosa, Ca
COLORADO
./ECIALIZING IN -hOusing for servicemen in
aerade Springs. FLOYD SrANLEY or GLENN
— , Box 2582 Walker and Company,
saltors.
Realty, 4910 Sonoma-
MILITARY HOUSING — FROM A MILITARY
SERVICE Orgenization., Send for our free
Rental ond Sales Bulletin for a fuil explana-
tion of home ewnership through the use of
FHA Military financing and Gi financing. Plus
detailed information on schools and temporary
rentals. Rentals from $90.00 and Sales
with down payments from $ ry
will furnish trenspertation te and trom th
local Air Bases for these short trips to D.C.
to look. MEMBERS OF MULTIPLE LISTING
SERVICE. Write or phone: ROUTH ROBBINS
REAL ESTATE CORP., 610 MADISON
ST.,
ALEXANDRIA, VA, King 8-4000.
FLORIDA
FLORIDA takefront lots. Easy monthly. pay-
1 ents. FREE literature. Box 1211, Eustis,
orida.
WHEN YOU RETIRE—Do you want to be able
to live on your income? if you do, consider
St. Cloud, Fia., where climate is good year
*ound and fishing is best. For information
—_ EVERETT ARNOLD, ST. CLOUD, FLOR-
LAXELAND HAS EVERTHING for the retired
. Rk. W. Miller
jate of Biake Realty, Lakeland,
LIKE. FLORIDA! Investigate Lakeland
Tucker Realtor, Box 442, Lakeland.
DAYTONA BEACH, FLORIDA
Choice paved lots from $750. Free Brochures.
Daytona High Ridge Estates. Dept. AT, Rt.
1, Box 48-A, Daytona Beach, Fieride.
FLORIDA—Private Riverfront Estate, west of
St. Augustine.. Fishing, boating, swimming,
unting. 1 acre homesites, $480 full price,
ay $4.00 monthly, Ne interest. Free booklet.
‘iver Estates, Fort White, Florida.
“ZTIRE in EXOTIC ISLE of PINES CUBA 1,
ACRE — View ESTATES only $599
$.5 down, $15 month. No interest. FREE BRO-
Ms apa "PEARSON REALTY, JUPITER, FLOR-
t>
FLORIDA $350 an acre. Investor's opportunity
—5 acre tracts in Florida ridge and lake
sections 30% down—terms—minimum eleva-
tion 65 feet. For. map and sales literature
write Colonel Bob Ross, U.S.A. Ret. c/o Cove
Reaity, 3900 No. Federal Highway, Pomponic
Beach, Fla
FLORIDA—2%4 ACRES—$295. Total Cost—$5
Per Month, No down payment—No Closing
Cost—Free Title Insurance. 52 miles West
of Miami. FREE BOOKLET. MIAMI - GULF
LAND INVESTORS, inc., Biscoyne Bidg.,
Write
Miemi 32, Florida.
POMPONIO REALTY “Virginia’s Realty Lead-
ers” Agents—GREENBRIER - DONNA | LEE
on ~n
-~. > ) ecommerce
SA)
0
F -
\N
—
twee +
ba ™ — >=
* - -~ ; —~_
; - ow OO . — --
\ \
“No more buzzing headquarters, Glucose — There’s complaints
that you’ve been waking up the office workers!”
S=REAL ESTATE MART S@an.
VIRGINIA 2
WASHINGTON BOUND Military Families de-
pend on Ask-Us Realty Company. For Virginia
housing Aocommodations. Write Today to:
4350 Lee Highway, Arlington, Va., or tele-
phone JA 8-1252.
PERSONALIZED SERVICE—We have NO part-
time employees with this organizatioo. WE DO
have a large and competent staff of full-
time professional Realtors who are qualified
te advise you and serve you to your very best
advantage with an up-to-the-minute selection
of preferred properties. Please write us for
any information you desire.
ARTHUR L. WALTERS CO
Street, Arlington, Virginia.
504 WN. Randolph
LOOK BEFORE YOU ARRIVE. Sales and rentals
in Northern Virginia. Let us have your re
quirement and we will send you photographs,
detailed information in regard to schools, oc
cupancy etc. Also information on temporary
furnished apartments, THE DARBY COMPANY,
2319 Wilson Biyd., Arlington, Virginia. JAck
son 5-9393.
PENTAGON TOUR? $300 DOWN Gi OR $950
DOWN FHA “IN SERVICE’—52-Foot brick
ramblers 15 minutes from D.C, Pentagon or
Belvoir. 3 bedrooms; equipped kitchen; liv-
ing room with fireplace; dining room; carport.
Other styles include split-level design and a
variety of rambiers, Also wide selection of
resale homes in all price ranges. Department-
alized service SALES — RENTALS — MORT-
GAGES—INSURANCE. Write or call ARLING-
TON REALTY CO., INC. REALTORS. (Member
Multiple Listing Service) 2300 Wilson Bivd.,
Arlington, Ya. JA 7-9300 (9 till 9.)
Apartments, furnished an
House rentals, BUILDERS, MORTGAGERS,
SURORS, DEVELOPERS — Now eilding ‘s
Beautiful VALLEY BROOK. Free information
available. P.O. Box 230, Arlington, Va. JAck-
son 7-6660.
WASHINGTON VICINITY—Housi
for the Armed Forces by retire
Write for infermation. Let
pepsaneet.
Capt. Miler, L
Cdr. Wolferd, Colonel Fitapatrick, «CWO
Gaddy and the ethers know your
vuttas ey
assistance
ATTRACTIVE AREA near Washington, D. C
15 minutes Pentagon MATS; 10 minutes Fort
Belvoir, 2-3 bedroom houses for rent or sale,
alsé 1-2 bedroom apartments for $72.50—
$85.00 monthly rent. Conveniently located
near schools, shopping center, churches. Mrs.
Geraci, rental manager, SOuth 5-9100—SOuth
5-7922. Monroe Development Corporation,
134 North Kings Highway Alexandria, Vir-
ginia.
MILLER REAL ESTATE, 1301 C Columbia Pike,
Arlington, Virginio. JA 5-2444
ALEXANDRIA, VIRGINIA, Werwick Village:
For Rent, Newly Decorated 3 bedroom homes
with Bosement, $118.00 Per month. Westing-
house Washer, Dryer, Refr rbage
Disposal, Soundproot wolls, Playgrounds, lawns.
Children welcome. ~ Shopping | close
by. Ten to ft mn 9te 9
daily including Sundey. Mt. Vernon Ave. and
Kennedy Street. TEmple. 6-6912.
VIRGINIA RETIREMENT Properties; farms,
homes, investments. Free list. Landon Atkins
realtor, Farmville, Va.
WASHINGTON BOUND? Let us find a gracious
country home for you in the rolling hills of
Northern Virginia, fess than an hour from
the Pentagon. Wyatt, Dickersom & Ce., Real-
tors, Leesburg, Virginia.
NORFOLK BOUND
Buying or Renting?
Your choice of new or used honies In various
locations, near bases. A. few left with No
Cash Down for G.1.‘s, also in-Service ‘financ-
ing. Write or Coll collect JU 8-5436, WALKER
REALTY CORPORATION, Military Highway ot
Little Creek Road, Norfolk, Virginia.
GEORGE H. RUCKER CO., General Brokerage.
Custom Built New Homes near Pentagon, also
used houses priced reolistically. Immediate oc-
cupancy. 1403 N. Courthouse Road, Arlington,
Virginie. JA §-8585.
ASSIGNED TO WASHINGTON, D. C.
We can solve your housirig problems. Be it
rentals, sales, financing. Send for our 18-
page brochure, “Northern Virginie.” Ask
those whe have served here—There is none
more reliable than:
THE GROOM CO., REALTORS
Dept. A, 2204 Wilson Bi’vd., Arlington, Ve
JA 17-4487
~ REAL ESTATE—APARTMENTS |
DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
ANDREWS, BOLLING receiving station, ex
press bus at door, close to schools, shops
Furnished, unfurnished. Chesapeake Terrace,
4242 4th St. S.E. Wash., D.C. JO 2-9700
Beautiful New Air Conditioned
Furnished & Unfurished Apartments
Efficiencies; 1 & 2 Bedrooms, $89.50 ond up
THE ELISE
825 New Hampshire Ave., N.W., Wash., D.C
THE PARK ELLISON
1700 Harvard St., ‘N.W., Wosh., D.C.
Write For Descriptive _ Brochure
MARYLAND
10 MINUTES FROM ANDREWS A.F.B. con-
venient to Boiling A.F.B. ond Navy Yard
One’ aed two bedrooms. Unfurnished from
$69.50 furnished from $64, For Brochure and
information contact DISTRICT HEIGHTS
APARTMENTS, 7812 District Heights Park
way, District Heights, Marylond. REdwood
5-8000.
VIRGINIA
HUNTING TOWERS ON THE POTOMAC. The
Washington area’s only waterfront apartments.
Efticiences, unfurnished for $80.00, furnished
from $120. One-bedroom apartments unfur-
nished from $110.00, furnished $170.00.
Buses direct from Pentagon, Navy Annex and
airport, 20 minutes to Ft. Belvoir. Write
Hunting Towers, Alexandria, Virginia. Phone
King 8-8484.
COMING TO WASHINGTON? _ Belle View
Apartments in Alexandria, Virginia on beauti-
ful Mt. Vernon Blvd. overlooking Potomac
River, 15 minutes to Pentegon, Main Navy
and Fort Belvoir, 1-2-3 Bedrooms, Reasonable
rents, all utilities included Schools, shop-
ping, free swimming pool. Write 601 Belle
View Bivd. Alexandria, Virginia.
JOB MARIZA
son,
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES
HIGH PAYING JOBS: Foreign, U.S.A. Ali
trades. Travel paid. information. Application
1020 Bread,
forms, Write Dept. 179 National,
wark, N.J.
RESUMES, Personalized for Civilian Job-
hunting. Write FILECO. 1456 Jones, Son Fron-
cisco, California.
ACTIVE DUTY TO AN END? If so, and, if you
have completed five years o: more of com-
missioned service, you may qualify for a new
forems opportunity which can give you secur-
oY ont @ position of dignity with earnings ef
000 per month * more, depending on your
Sin. we | several ports of the
United States. For details. write immediately
te: Carl Thompson, President, General Sery-
ices Life insurance Company, 910 17th Street,
N.W., Washington 6, De
MEDICAL TECHNOLOGISTS, men or women,
must be Registered ASCP or eligible. Positions
in modern hospitals 50 to 200 beds located
in 10 smali coal mining communities West
Va., Ky., Ve. Appalachian Mt. Area. Excellent
laboratory facilities, pathologists in cher
Beginning salaries $4020 to $5880 yeer, le.
pending on qualifications and experience. Four
weeks vacation, annual increments, nencen-
tributery pension. Promotion opportunities
within 10-hospital system as well os within
individual hospital. Application forms and
further information: MINERS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL ASSOCIATION, Box 61, Williom-
West Virginia.
COPYRIGHTED
opportunities
$$ JOBS $$
REPORTS ON BEST PAYING
in foreign and domestic em-
ployment for skilled and unskilled. Many
occupations for men and women. Special re-
ports for pilots and all aviation specielists
with airlines, feeder lines, aircraft factories,
crop dusters, corporation aircraft, Listings in
construction, government, oil mining, ship-
ping and many other tields includes Europe,
South America, Japan, Spanish Airbases,
Alaska, etc. Top paying jobs. Application
forms and other necessary information. Only
$2.00 ($2.25 air mail) including registration-
advisory service. Satisfaction guoranteed or
money back. RESEARCH SERVICES, SUITE
512-T MERAMEC BUILDING, ST. LOUIS 5,
MISSOURI.
CIVIL SERVICE JOBS — Overseas, USA —
Mechanical, clerical, professional. List, 50
cents. Civil Service Bulletin, 17148 Oceon
Parkway, Brooklyn 23, N.Y
OIL EXPLORATION | 25% foreign bonus, Elec
tronics Technicians, Surveyors Mechanics
Single. Travel paid Geophysical Service, Inc
Box 35084 Airlawn Station Dallas 35, Texas
MISCELLANEOUS
BINGO BARGAINS —
Save on prizes. Over 1,000 items. FREE
CATALOG. Norris 487-TT Broadway, New York
DOG TRAVEL SERVICE
BOARDING AND WORLD WIDE travel service
for dogs. Traveling kennels for sale or rent
Send for folders.
Bed Rock, , Drawer 502, Westerly, R. |
FIREARMS
SERVICEMEN’S SPECIAL __
Famous .38 Smith & Wesson (Military ond
Police) revolvers 5° Barrel, Only $29.50
Famous 30-06 U.S. Enfield service rifles
(manufactured by Remington and Winchester)
6-shot repeater $34.50. 30 Calibre precision
Swiss service model }2-shot detachable mogea
zine repeater $16.95. Send remittance, im
mediate shipment International Firearms, 22
_EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES | Stgman St. St. Albans, Vermont ;
—e MISCELLANEOUS
WANTED AIRCRAFT MECHANICS. Three aapre- - P
years experience. Electricians, Radio, Instru-
ments, Flight Line, Airframes. Accessories. STROUT CATALOG
Apply to AEMCO Personnel Hangar 5, Oak- | MAILED FREE! Coast - to - coast, 34 States,
land, Calif. 3,130 properties described, Farms, Homes,
7 Years Service. WORLDS
HELICOPTER PILOTS AND MECHANICS LARGEST!" STROUT REALTY, 1138-YW Wood
WANTED. For domestic and foreign duty in| ward Bidg., Washington, D.C.
en, HR: “Ean OOD being G¢-| TAPANESE EMBROIDERED SERVICE RIBBONS
cepted.
Write: Petroleum Helicopters, Inc. send 10c Color photograph, complete infor
P. O. Drawer 2150 ©.L.1.
Lafayette, Louisiana
ATTENTION INDIANA MEDICS!
Wonderful location in beautiful new air-con-
ditioned Medical Center. Will partition to
suit doctor. Photographs on request. R. E.
Clift, DDS, 6355 Rockville Road, indianapolis,
indiana.
STUDY OVERSEAS on your G.I.! Send $1.
for complete information book. Includes ap-
proved schools, how and where to apply, trans-
portation, scholarships, etc. OVERSEAS, 1499
Cowper, Pale Alte, California.
CIVIL ENGINEERS
Jobs in
CALIFORNIA
for recent college graduates
in civil engineering soon to
be released from service.
High level professional work
with promotional
opportunities in
HIGHWAY .© BRIDGE
HYDRAULIC ® SANITARY
ENGINEERING
Send resume to: C. S$. Warner, Supervisor,
Section T, State Board, 801
Copitel Ave., Secramente 14, Calif.
excellent
Personnel
mation. | Parker's | Box ‘1829, Williamsburg, Va
BINGO MERCHANDISE
Over 1000 Bingo and Door prizes Nome Brand
Merchandise. Housewares, Appliances, Jewelry
Watches, Soft Goods, Blankets, etc. Send fo
FREE catalog and confidential wholesale pric
list. Immediate Shipment Conelle Products
Co., Inc., Dept. B, 343 W. 26th St., N.Y.C
NOW YOU CAN LIVE in Hollywood for $3.0¢
per month with our confidential receiving on
forwarding system. «Letters remailed 25c, six
picturesque viewcards, $1.00. Classified ads,
opportunities, information service, $1.00. Write
today. DICTOR, 452814 Edgewood Place,
Hollywood, California
OF INTEREST TO WOMEN
$200 MONTHLY POSSIBLE Sewing Babywear!
No house selling! Send stamped, cddressed
envelope. Cuties, Warsaw 133, Indiana
OPPORTUNITIES
GOVERNMENT SURPLUS What, Where
When, How to Buy. $1.00. PARKER’S, Box
1829, Williamsburg, Va
“THAT CIVILIAN JOB For Army, Navy
Air Force Officers retiring or leaving active
service. This hand book is designed to oid
you find your best job. Price $5.00. Mail
orders to: PERSONAL ASSOCIATES, P.O. Box
142 Carlisle, Penna
SWAGGER STICKS
SWAGGER STICK, $1.00. 20-inch black strong
plastic. With rank/name in gold add 50
Swagger Sticks, 332 Buford, Montgomery, Ale
BLACK PLASTIC swagger sticks tipped with
.30 cal. shells. 75¢ or 3 for $2.00. With names
and ranks add 50c per stick. Swaggerstix Co.,
Box 7082, Montgomery, Ala
TAPE RECORDERS
TAPE RECORDERS $99.95. Tope é 1200
Rolls Prepaid $10.95. Don's Tope Center, Box
1153, Celumbus, Ge.
48 ARMY TIMES
OCTOBER 19, 1957
Helicopter School
Expands in Year
CAMP WOLTERS, Tex.—The first anniversary of the
Army
Primary Helicopter School was celebrated during
the regularly scheduled monthly field day, Oct. 12. Since
its inception Oct. 12, 1956, the mis-
sion of the school of instructing
and training selected officers, war-
rant officers, and enlisted men in
Y@ ary and basic helicopter flight
9 11: as well as instructing in
the employment, tactics, logistics,
and techniques of Army Aviation
has expanded to include approxi-
+
Language School
Chooses Insigne
MONTEREY, Calif. — Students
and military staff members at the
Army Language School were pin-
ning colorful new badges on their
uniforms this week after the school
officially announced that an adap-
tation of the ALS coat of arms
would serve as the distinctive unit
insigne
Insignia will be worn on the
shoulder straps of the uniform and
they will designate the wearer as
a student or permanent party mem
ber of the school. The insignia are
exact duplicates of the escutcheon
or shield portion of the ALS coat
of arms
The upper right division of the
shield is blue and bears a symbolic
representation of the Rosetta Stone,
which first gave scholars a clue to
the meaning of Egyptian hiero-
glyphics.
The lower division of the escut-
cheon is red and bears the hat of
the Catalan volunteers, who were
Spanish troops attached to the ex-
pedition headed by Father Juni-
pero Serra when he founded the
Presidio in 1770. The hat symbol-
izes the military and rich historical
character of the Presidio.
The shield is divided by a gold
band mounted with an olive wreath
proper, or green. This is to signify
the aim of peace through under-
standing. The gold torch of the
coat of arms was not adapted for
the unit insigne
Gen. Bush Assigned
To 8th Army, Korea
WASHINGTON New _assign-
me und retirement of two gen-
als were an! ed Oct. 9 by
Secreta rf t Army Wilber M
Ma} el Geo _ Bush, di-
‘tor, management analysis, office
of the Com} troller of the Army,
ishington, D. ¢ has been as-
signed to Headquarters, Eighth
Army (Korea He will report to
his new post in December,
Brig. Gen. Louis H. Foote, divi-
sion engineers, North Pacifie Divl-
sion, Portland, Ore., will retire
Nov. 30 after more than 31 years
service
mately 175 students now in resi-
dence in the five Army Aviation
transportation pilot course classes
and the two Army Aviator helicop.
ter course classes.
Capt. James R. Thames, Student
Co, commander, looking back over
the work of the year feels ‘We've
come a long way in the past year,
although it has not been an easy
task. Thanks to the determination
of the faculty and students and the
remarkable job done by Southern
(Southern Airways Co., contractors
for flight training at Wolters)
we’re turning out a sound product.”
” ” 7
THE FIRST CLASS of the Army
Aviator helicopter course to be
trained at Wolters received di-
plomas Oct. 10.
Maj. Gen. William S. Biddle,
commanding general III Corps,
Fort Hood, Tex., addressed the
graduates, who began their 10-
week training here Aug. 5, 1957.
The graduating class numbering
38 officers, all of whom are quali-
fied Army fixed-wing aviators,
represents 95 percent. survival
from the original group which be-
gan training.
The 80 - hour flight training
course conducted at the Army Pri-
mary Helicopter School is a part
of the new stepped-up Army Avia-
tion Program where by pilots must
be proficient in both fixed and
rotary-wing piloting.
x Lo *
THE GRADUATION ceremonies
were followed by a buffet dinner
and dance for the graduates, their
ladies, and invited guests.
Senior member of the class was
Col. Robert F. Cassidy,
class commander.
Other graduates were Majs.
Robert R. Stanfield, Robert J. Jef-
frey; Capts. Henry J. Baringer,
Louis B. White, and Paul Ankney;
ist Lts. Allen W. Blankenship,
Philip B. Caldwell, Dudley J. Car-
ver, Marion H. Collins, Robert F.
Comar, Jack L. Duncan, Jimmy N.
Eloff, Larry L. Flowers, Lawrence
R. Fralick, David H. Hall, Hal A.
Hamilton, Jack D. Hill, Albert L.
Lampkin, William F. Mullinix, Wil-
liam Palk, Fred Pierce, Gale T.
Reevis, John D. Reiser, Albert G.
Sanford, Robert M. Shunier, Duane
R. Simon, Leo F. Suiter, Gary B.
Taylor, Dale H. Twachman, Gene
E. Vollmer, and Don M. Waldroop;
2d Lts. Robert D. Fleer, George T.
Glenn, Cleon C. Leck, Richard R.
Smith, Billy E. Sprague, and Wil-
liam C. Stokes.
services Su
the Arkansas Ailitary District.
MAJ. GEN. EDWIN A. WALKER and Col. William
, Oct. 12, at their biyouac area at
Col. Kuhn is com
on duty at Central High School in Little Rock.
honorary |
24th Div. Dies;
Ist Cav. inKorea
WESTERN FRONT, Korea —
The 24th Inf. Div.,; first Ameri-
can unit to engage the Commu-
nists in Korea, died quietly this
week.
The 16-year-old division was
redesignated the ist Cav. Div.
at a simple ceremony in the fog
within a few miles of the Armis-
tice Zone separating Allied and
Communist troops.
Some 1200 soldiers and a few
hundred Koreans watched, and
a band played “Auld Lang
Syne,” as the division colors
were furled and cased to be sent
to Washington. Then the famed
black and yellow horse patch of
the Ist Cav. returned to Korea.
Maj. Gen. Ralph W. Zwicker
was the last commander of the
24th Div. and is new command-
er of the Ist Cav.
82d Airborne to Sponsor
Carnival, Merchant Show
FORT BRAGG, N.C.—Some 70
Fayetteville merchants and the 82d
Abn. Div. will be in show business
next month, when they cooperate
to bring the Ross Manning Shows
to Bragg.
The division-sponsored Soldiers
Fair will open on Oet, 31 and run
through Nov. 9.
Local businessmen will place
their wares under canvas at the
Fair, alongside the regular Man-
ning performers.
Attractions uncommon to the
Every Dime Counts
MSGT. JAMES KANE, on equipment Inspector at Fort Belvotr,
Va., is a man who fi tral
patysep 0 $pen
ao dime — but wh
sets a high individua read of : - om Pete, he shows SP
simpl
Robert Shannon how ft’
he recelves in change, it ok
total over to qari
Fund was $46.50 this
y keeps every dime
Whe t Is old mug ond turns the
dénation to Belvoir’s United Givers
Bh fa has been higher in the post.
Lewis Engi
Trainfire Pop-Up Targets ~
FORT LEWIS, Wash, — Engin-
eers are readying Fort Lewis’
rifle ranges for “Punchy Pete.”
“Pete” is an electrical pop-up
silhouette target that will replace
the conventional bullseye when the
post adapts the Trainfire I course
of marksmanship next summer.
The system was expected to ‘go
into use here earlier, but delays
in acquiring materials have pushed
the date back to August, .1958,
about a month after scheduled
shipment of the new targets, ac-
cording to Maj. William W. Roth-
mann, G-3 staff project officer.
Meanwhile, 116th Group and 4th
Div. engineers have begun work on
three complete Trainfire ranges,
with Maj. John Kahaniak, post en-
gineer, directing construction.
carnival have been added as a re-
sult of the Fayetteville merchants’
participation.
Some automobile dealers have
scheduled unveiling of the 1958
model cars at their exhibition tent
on the fair grounds. The 1958
model trailers will also be on dis-
play.
Admission to the midway will be
25 cents. Proceeds will go to sup-
port various activities of the di-
vision.
Pe... Manning Shows have*played
age posts from Fi
r° oo or ipa bring 22
and 12 shows Ae Bragg. The
show is transported by trucks
enough to @ equivalent o
40 railroad ¢arloa
More tha - peter will
accompany argival,
Crippled Grphans, jun-
lor po *. op: re be ad-
—e @ divi-
sion, en to
reach at und on Kids’
Day, te at * 98 rid
adieg 4 wi
be ad-
mitted free op ob 4 dies Day.
2 Soldiers * Louded
ald K. Humbe: asst, gt
Fo 9 ‘
Mecker, end
T §ol-
diers at
the two nstaliat ong a
The three complete facilities are
a sharp change from original plans’
that called for a single “pilot”
course. z
Trainfire; the Army’s new ap-
proach to teaching its soldiers to
shoot, was developed after stiidies
showed. the feed for men in com-
bat to fire faster and with greater
accuracy.
All “qualification” a” Tigi het
an annual eyent for
enlisted men. alike—will be on the
new ranges as soon as targets are
installed. Old. soldiers will see
nearly every trademark of the pres-
ent system discarded. |
.
GONE WITH THE WINDAGE
will be;
KD (Known Distance ranges),
the hours on PRI (preliminary rifl>
instruction) circles, and the M-I
sling so familiar to veterans. The
sling, now used to steady the
shooter’s arm, becomes a carrying
device only.
Also happily dispensed with will
be the “pit detail”’—the crew that
raises and lowers targets after each
round is fired. Punchy Pete is wired
to do his own bobbing.
The Punchy Pete targets are
elgctrically controlled from the
control tower. They pop up at
flick of a range 8
fall when hit by a and
down at the end of a five or 10
second firing period.
Fort Gordon Unit
Has PT Carnival
FORT iy > G @-
thing new has been devised tor Lar
entertainment of the young
eurrently undergo bry weeks
of basic combat as mem-
bers of the ist Ba, ist Training
Re
. a recent oh sical training car-
nival, teams of 25 men from each
of the four companies within the
battalion were pitted against each
— for the battalion champion-
8
The carnival, featuring a acme
‘| PT test for each femtastent,
man hysical r
within the battalion. Each eompany
wag backed up by its own cheering
section,
rading the ot Traaing were
BD oe of the Ist oe ng Regt’s
pe committee. Each mam was
f ¢arefully to see that he
gee each joe according to
a: fhanu
B. was deslared. they
with: an average of $35.02
Area Trang, Terminal Centes,
per man,
RPekSs Sescere ers
pla’
diss
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y
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